ANNUAL REPORT
1
annual report / 2011
1RESPONSIBILITY STATEMENT 3
STATEMENT OF THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND THE CHAIRMAN THE MANAGEMENT BOARD 6
KEY COMPANY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS 10
ABOUT THE COMPANY 12
KEY 2011 EVENTS 18
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY 22
2 RISKS 30
INDUSTRY REVIEW 34
3 INVESTMENT 50
INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT 57
FINANCIAL RESULTS 60
4 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 68
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET 94
5 SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY 106
CONTACTS 112
BRANCHES 114
GLOSSARY 116
APPENDICES 118
REPORT ON COMPLIANCE WITH THE UK CODE ON CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 118
LIST OF RUSHYDRO’S INTERNAL DOCUMENTS 120
TABLE OF CONTENTS
2 RESPONSIBILITY STATEMENT
annual report / 2011
3
annual report / 2011
RESPONSIBILITY STATEMENT
Chairman of the Management Board Y.V. Dod
Chief Accountant D.V.Finkel
(b) The management report includes a fair review of the development and performance of JSC RusHydro’s business and the Company’s position, and the undertakings included in the consolidation, taken as a whole, together with a de-scription of principal risks and uncertainties that the Com-pany faces.
We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:
(a) The financial statements, prepared in accordance with IFRS, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, fi-nancial position and profit or loss of JSC RusHydro, and the undertakings included in the consolidation, taken as a whole;
RESPONSIBILITY STATEMENT
2 0 1 12 0 1 1
2 0 1 1
RusHydroa
nn
ua
l re
po
rt
STATEMENT OF THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND THE CHAIRMAN OF THE MANAGEMENT BOARD
KEY COMPANY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
ABOUT THE COMPANY
KEY 2011 EVENTS
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
6
annual report / 2011
STATEMENT OF THE CHAIRMAN OF JSC RUSHYDRO’S BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Vladimir TatsiyChairman of the Board of Directors
STATEMENT OF THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Dear shareholders,
Last year marked a period of drastic changes for RusHydro. The Company achieved a breakthrough increase in produc-tion capacity: the controlling stake in JSC RAO ES of the East enhanced the Company’s installed capacity by one-third to 35.2 GW (from 21.6 GW). The efficient renova-tion of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP brought its power
generation to the pre-accident level; and the acquisition of International Energy Corporation (Armenia) enabled the Company to compete on a global scale.In 2011, total power generation by RusHydro power plants was 77,052 kWh, a 7% increase from the previous year. During the reporting year, output also increased 7.1% to reach 75,732 kWh. Important progress was made by the Company’s generation units, which managed to boost
7
annual report / 2011
AND THE CHAIRMAN OF JSC RUSHYDRO’S MANAGEMENT BOARD
YevgenyDod Chairman of the Management Board
AND THE CHAIRMAN OF THE MANAGEMENT BOARD
gene rating performance, despite a continued low water pe-riod in Russian rivers.The growth in energy generation enabled RusHydro to im-prove its financial results. In 2011, the Company’s profit increased to RUR 29,493 million from RUR 10,399 million in the previous year according to IFRS reporting.Following the August 2009 accident, the advanced restora-tion of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP, a Russian energy
sector flagship, continued to be the Company’s top priority during the reporting year.In 2011, RusHydro launched the second restoration phase to install 10 brand new hydro-power units in the turbine room. The four units commissioned in 2010 following repair work will be also replaced by new ones.The first new hydro-power unit (Unit No. 1) was commis-sioned December 19th, 2011; the HPP will commission three
8
annual report / 2011
STATEMENT OF THE CHAIRMAN OF JSC RUSHYDRO’S BOARD OF DIRECTORS
new units per year during the 2012-2014 period.As a result, the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP will be com-pletely fitted with state-of-the-art equipment that complies with all reliability and safety requirements by 2014.Along with renovating the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP equipment, the Company continued constructing the coast-al spillway. This sophisticated hydro-power structure, which ensures the maximum HPP operational safety level, was commissioned October 12th, 2011.The progress made in 2011 underlies further growth. As early as this year, the Company will reach its record high level for commissioning new facilities of more than 4 GW. This includes the Boguchanskaya HPP, the Zagorskaya PSHPP-2 and the Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP. RusHydro’s plans, however, are not limited to the above. In 2013, the Company plans to complete construction of the 100 MW Gotzalinskaya HPP in Dagestan. The 342 MW Zaramag skaya HPP-1 will be launched in 2015. In total, the Company plans to commission 10.4 GW by 2015. The Russian hydro-power industry has not seen these growth rates before.The Company’s growth is based on seamless operations at all facilities. Therefore, technical upgrades of our power plants remains our principal focus. Last year, we approved the Comprehensive Modernization Program which aims to replace up to 50% of the total turbine fleet by 2025.RusHydro uses the best global practices to renew fixed as-sets. The Company works together with Alstom (France) to carry out comprehensive renovation of the Cascade of Kubansky HPPs. A joint project with Voith Hydro (Austria) involves modernizing the Saratovskaya and Miatlinskaya power plants. Converting to more sophisticated technolo-gies will enable installed capacity growth to 1 GW.To implement its plans, the Company has to unite the ef-forts of different organizations, from research and design institutes to operating and construction companies. In this context, RusHydro is focused on developing its own engi-neering and research competencies. In 2011, the Company completed establishing its unique research and design fa-cilities which include three design institutes – Hydropro-ject, Lenhydroproject and Mosoblihydroproject – and two research institutes – Vedeneyev VNIIG and NIIES. Today,
the Company consolidates all Russia’s existing research and design organizations operating in the hydro-power sector and efficiently employs their extensive expertise and re-search potential.Last year, RusHydro approved the Innovative Development Program, which has essentially expanded R&D and innova-tion project costs vis-à-vis previous years. Compared with 2010, R&D costs in 2011 were 10 times higher.This increased attention on sophisticated technologies will encourage RusHydro’s leading position in the alternative energy sector. The Company, in particular, is focused on developing its geo-thermal competencies. Currently, we are completing the construction of an experimental binary unit at the 2.5 MW Pauzhetskaya GeoPP in Kamchatka. The Company has developed an investment feasibility study for the project to increase the Mutnovskaya GeoPP’s installed capacity by 13 MW.The underlying driver of RusHydro’s strategy to develop Far East energy sector includes not only energy-efficient innovative technologies. We are also relying on an essential synergistic effect gained via the cooperation of JSC RAO ES of the East with other Far East companies, the controlling stakes and interests of which were acquired by RusHydro during the reporting year. Please note that the above-men-tioned acquisitions not only increased RusHydro’s installed capacity by almost 9 GW, but also made the Company the largest player on Russia’s Far Eastern energy market.Due to the combination of the above-mentioned factors, RusHydro is widely regarded as the blue chip Russian ener-gy company with the best liquidity in the sector. The Com-pany’s securities are traded on the largest trading platforms globally, including the London Stock Exchange. In 2011, Platts agency recognized RusHydro as Russia’s fastest growing energy company and placed it fifth on the global Platts-50 list. These results underscore the Company’s ad-vanced capitalization prospects.A high level of corporate governance continues to be one of the Company’s top competitive advantages. RusHydro’s management works closely with shareholders and the Board of Directors. During the reporting period, the Com-pany held 24 meetings of the Board of Directors, addres-
9
annual report / 2011
AND THE CHAIRMAN OF JSC RUSHYDRO’S MANAGEMENT BOARD
sing key strategic corporate growth issues. The Board’s de-cisions included approving the 2012-2025 Comprehensive Modernization Program for RusHydro’s Generation Facilities and the 2011-2015 Innovative Development Program with an outlook till 2021.The joint work is based on principles of transparency, re-sponsibility, accountability, good faith and fairness. Due to the Company’s commitment to the above-mentioned prin-ciples, the Consortium of Russian Institute of Directors and Expert RA rating agency increased the Company’s National Corporate Governance Rating to 7+, which is among the highest ratings assigned to a domestic company.Today, the Russian energy industry in general and RusHy-dro in particular face new challenges. Without slowing our growth rates, we have to meet objectives related to con-structing, commissioning and modernizing the Company’s facilities, continue to enhance their reliable operation and ensure further growth in our production and financial per-formance. As before, the management and the Board of Directors will be focused on the interests of all sharehold-ers, irrespective of the number of shares that they hold. This joint work will strengthen our leading position in the energy sector and ensure continuous growth in the Com-pany’s value.
Sincerely,
Vladimir Tatsiy
Yevgeny Dod
10
annual report / 2011
KEY COMPANY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE ¹
PRODUCTION PERFORMANCE ²
KEY COMPANY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
Profit for the period,million rubles 10,399
29,493
32,112
2009 2010 2011
Energy generation,mln kWh 72,002
77,052
81,607
2009 2010 2011
Installed capacity,GW
2009 2010 2011
25.526.1*
25.4
* including JSC Geotherm, JSC Kolymaenergo, JSC Pauzhetskaya GeoPP and JSC MEC
EBITDA,million rubles 85,633
83,418
56,826
2009 2010 2011
¹Figures under IFRS ²Figures for RusHydro Group
11
annual report / 2011
KEY COMPANY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
CREDIT RATING
CHARTER CAPITAL AND CAPITALIZATION
288,695290,303
269,695
2009 2010 2011
Charter capital,million rubles
Capitalization,million US dollars 15,503
8,709
10,168
2009 2010 2011
Rating Agency Fitch Ratings Standard & Poor’s Moody’s
International rating ВВ+ ВВ+ Ba1
National rating AA (rus) ruAA+ Aa1.ru
Outlook Positive Stable Stable
12
annual report / 2011
ABOUT THE COMPANY
ABOUT THE COMPANYMISSIONRusHydro’s mission is to effectively utilize hydro resour-ces, to create conditions required for reliable performance of Russia’s Unified Energy System (UES) and to enhance renewable energy source (RES) usage to benefit the Com-pany’s shareholders and society as a whole.
HISTORY
• Hydro-power generation assets of the re-organized OJSC RAO UES of Russia holding united
2005–2008
• The Russian Federation becomes one of the Company’s shareholders via an additional share issue2007
• The Company’s shares are listed on the Russian stock market• A depositary receipt (DR) program is launched
2008
• Depositary receipts (DRs) listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE)2009
• Completion of the first stage of restoration at the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP• Completion of the Kashkhatau HPP and the Egorlykskaya HPP-2 construction• Consolidation of existing hydro-power assets in Siberia
2010
• Acquisitions of assets in Russia’s Far East2011
2004 • Company created under Russian Government Decree No. 1254-r (dated 01.09.2003)
13
annual report / 2011
RusHydro Group unites R&D and design and engineering facilities, as well as retail energy companies.Retail power assets are consolidated within RusHydro’s subsidiary, JSC ESK RusHydro. The sales sector of RusHy-dro includes guaranteeing suppliers: LLC Energy Supply Company Bashkortostan; JSC Krasnoyarskenerosbyt; JSC Ryazan Energy Supply Company and JSC Chuvashskaya Energy Supply Company. The Company has high-profile investment projects in vari-ous Russian regions. The largest of the new HPP construc-tion projects include:• The Boguchanskaya HPP (in conjunction with RUSAL) on
the Angara River in the Krasnoyarsk Region;• The second stage of the Zaramagskye HPPs on the Ardon
River in the Republic North Ossetia-Alania;• The Zagorskaya PSPP-2 in the Sergievo-Posadsky District
of the Moscow Region;• The Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP in the Magadan Region;• The Nizhne-Bureyskaya HPP in the Amur Region.
Today, RusHydro is systematically important for the Russian power sector; it also ensures the performance and security of major systems that are vital for Russia’s existence.As of 31.12.2011 JSC RusHydro is not included in the list of strategic enterprises and strategic joint stock companies.
ABOUT THE COMPANY
* Including JSC Geoterm, JSC Kolymaenergo, JSC Pauzhetskaya GeoPP anf JSC MEC
THE COMPANY TODAYRusHydro is Russia’s largest generating company by in-stalled capacity and the leader in renewable energy using water currents, sea tides, wind and geo-thermal energy.The installed capacity of the Company’s power plants is 26.1* GW and 35.2 GW including JSC RAO ES of the Et, JSC Pavlodolskaya HPP and JSC KamGEK. The total thermal capacity is 16,168 Gcal/h. The Company unites more than 70 renewable energy source facilities, including:• The Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP (Russia’s largest HPP);• Nine HPPs of the Volzhskaya-Kamskaya Cascade;• The Zeyskaya HPP;• The Bureyskaya HPP;• The Novosibirskaya HPP;• HPPs in the North Caucasus Region;• Geo-thermal plants in Kamchatka;• The Zagorskaya Pumped Storage Power Plant (PSPP) in
the Moscow Region;• The Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade of HPPs in the Republic of
Armenia.
The Company is developing renewable energy source (RES) projects. These projects utilize sea tides, geo-thermal en-ergy and small HPPs, including:• Construction of the Severnaya Tidal Power Plant in the
Murmansk Region;• Construction of a binary power unit at the Pauzhetskaya
GeoPP;• An increase in installed capacity at Mutnovskaya GeoPP
by using secondary heat.
ARMENIA
ST. PETERSBURG
MOSCOW
Kolyma
Kol
yma
Lena
Yen
isey
Yenisey
Yenisey
Yenisey
Ob
Ob
Ob
Ob
Volga
Volga
Amur
Amur
Amur
l. B
aika
l
Lena
Lena
Lena
Lena
Ang
ara
Angara
Zey
a
Zeya
Zeya
Kol
yma
Kam
a
Burey
a
Tidal PPs
Wind PPs
Retail companies
Research and design organizations
Thermal PPs underconstruction
Operating HPP
Operating HPPs under renovation
Operating HPPs in progress
GeoPP
HPPs under construction
Thermal PPs
Zagorskaya PSHPP 1200 MW
Zagorskaya PSHPP-2 840 MW
NIIES
Nizhegorodskaya HPP 520 MW
Cheboksarskaya HPP 1370 MW
Kamskaya HPP 522 MW
Votkinskaya HPP 1020 MW
Saratovskaya HPP 1360 MW Bashkortostan retail energy company
Cascade of Kubanskiye HPPs 476.6 MW Volzhskaya HPP 2592.5 MW
Dagestan Branch 1381.8 MW
Kabardino-Balkarian
Branch 155.5 MW
Kalmykskaya WPP
Karachaevo-Cherkessian Branch, HPP 160.6 MW
Novosibirskaya HPP 455 MW
Neporozhniy Sayano-Shushensky Branch 6721 MW
Krasnoyarskenergosbyt
Boguchanskaya HPP 3000 MW
Byreyskaya HPP 2010 MWNizhne-Bureyskaya HPP 320 MW
Zeyskaya HPP 1330 MW
Kolymskaya HPP 900 MW
Tolmachyovskiye HPPs 45.2 MW
Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP 570 MW
Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade 561 MW
Lenhydroproject
Vedeneyev VNIIG
Kislogubskaya Tidal PP
Cascade of Verkhnevolzhskiye HPPs 466.6 MW
Hydroproject institute
Mosoblhydroproject
Ryazan retail energy company
Chuvash retail energy company
HPP of the Northern Ossetian Branch 76.9 MW
ZaramagskyHPPs 15+342 MW
Irganayskaya HPP 400 MW
Verkhne-Mutnovskaya GeoPP 12 MW
Pauzhetskaya GeoPP 12+2.5 MW
Mutnovskaya GeoPP-1 50 MW
Zelenchugskaya
PSHPP 140 MW
Cotsatlinskaya HPP 100 MW
Partizanskaya TPP 203 MW
Blagoveshenskaya CHPP 280 MW
Raychikhiskaya TPP 102 MW
Yakutskaya TPP 320 MW
Mirninskaya TPP 72 MW
Sakhalinskaya TPP 252 MW
Komsomolskiye CHPPs (1,2) 265.5 MW
Amurskaya CHPP 285 MW
Vladivostok CHPP-2 497 MW
Artyomovskaya CHPP 400 MW
Urengoy Mobile PP 72 MW
Labytnangi Mobile PP 73 MW
Sovgavanskaya CHPP 120 MW
Arkagalinskaya TPP 224 MW
Egvenkinotskaya TPP 34 MW
Anadyr CHPP 56 MW
Chaunskaya CHPP 34.5 MW
Khabarovskiye CHPPs 1155 MW
Nikolaevskaya CHPP 130.6 MW
Yakutskaya TPP-2 170 MWCascade of Viluysky HPPs 680 MW
Chulmanskaya CHPP 48 MW
Nerunginskya TPP 570 MW
Magadanskaya CHPP 96 MW KamchatskiyeCHPPs 406.8 MW
Yuzhno-Sakhalinskaya CHPP-1 225 MW
Zhigulevskaya HPP 2341.5 MW
Kyzym Mobile PP 72 MW
Primorskaya TPP 1467 MW
Komsomolskaya CHPP-3 360 MW
Far-Eastern Energy CompanyGTU-CHPP on the base of VladivostokCHPP-2 and Central Steam-Water Boiler Plant
Maya TPP 92.85 MW
Anadyrskaya Gas Engine CHPP 29.65 MW
Yuzhno-Sakhalinskaya CHPP-1 5th power unit-1 91 MW
annual report / 2011
14 ABOUT THE COMPANY
ARMENIA
ST. PETERSBURG
MOSCOW
Kolyma
Kol
yma
Lena
Yen
isey
Yenisey
Yenisey
Yenisey
Ob
Ob
Ob
Ob
Volga
Volga
Amur
Amur
Amur
l. B
aika
l
Lena
Lena
Lena
Lena
Ang
ara
Angara
Zey
a
Zeya
Zeya
Kol
yma
Kam
a
Burey
a
Tidal PPs
Wind PPs
Retail companies
Research and design organizations
Thermal PPs underconstruction
Operating HPP
Operating HPPs under renovation
Operating HPPs in progress
GeoPP
HPPs under construction
Thermal PPs
Zagorskaya PSHPP 1200 MW
Zagorskaya PSHPP-2 840 MW
NIIES
Nizhegorodskaya HPP 520 MW
Cheboksarskaya HPP 1370 MW
Kamskaya HPP 522 MW
Votkinskaya HPP 1020 MW
Saratovskaya HPP 1360 MW Bashkortostan retail energy company
Cascade of Kubanskiye HPPs 476.6 MW Volzhskaya HPP 2592.5 MW
Dagestan Branch 1381.8 MW
Kabardino-Balkarian
Branch 155.5 MW
Kalmykskaya WPP
Karachaevo-Cherkessian Branch, HPP 160.6 MW
Novosibirskaya HPP 455 MW
Neporozhniy Sayano-Shushensky Branch 6721 MW
Krasnoyarskenergosbyt
Boguchanskaya HPP 3000 MW
Byreyskaya HPP 2010 MWNizhne-Bureyskaya HPP 320 MW
Zeyskaya HPP 1330 MW
Kolymskaya HPP 900 MW
Tolmachyovskiye HPPs 45.2 MW
Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP 570 MW
Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade 561 MW
Lenhydroproject
Vedeneyev VNIIG
Kislogubskaya Tidal PP
Cascade of Verkhnevolzhskiye HPPs 466.6 MW
Hydroproject institute
Mosoblhydroproject
Ryazan retail energy company
Chuvash retail energy company
HPP of the Northern Ossetian Branch 76.9 MW
ZaramagskyHPPs 15+342 MW
Irganayskaya HPP 400 MW
Verkhne-Mutnovskaya GeoPP 12 MW
Pauzhetskaya GeoPP 12+2.5 MW
Mutnovskaya GeoPP-1 50 MW
Zelenchugskaya
PSHPP 140 MW
Cotsatlinskaya HPP 100 MW
Partizanskaya TPP 203 MW
Blagoveshenskaya CHPP 280 MW
Raychikhiskaya TPP 102 MW
Yakutskaya TPP 320 MW
Mirninskaya TPP 72 MW
Sakhalinskaya TPP 252 MW
Komsomolskiye CHPPs (1,2) 265.5 MW
Amurskaya CHPP 285 MW
Vladivostok CHPP-2 497 MW
Artyomovskaya CHPP 400 MW
Urengoy Mobile PP 72 MW
Labytnangi Mobile PP 73 MW
Sovgavanskaya CHPP 120 MW
Arkagalinskaya TPP 224 MW
Egvenkinotskaya TPP 34 MW
Anadyr CHPP 56 MW
Chaunskaya CHPP 34.5 MW
Khabarovskiye CHPPs 1155 MW
Nikolaevskaya CHPP 130.6 MW
Yakutskaya TPP-2 170 MWCascade of Viluysky HPPs 680 MW
Chulmanskaya CHPP 48 MW
Nerunginskya TPP 570 MW
Magadanskaya CHPP 96 MW KamchatskiyeCHPPs 406.8 MW
Yuzhno-Sakhalinskaya CHPP-1 225 MW
Zhigulevskaya HPP 2341.5 MW
Kyzym Mobile PP 72 MW
Primorskaya TPP 1467 MW
Komsomolskaya CHPP-3 360 MW
Far-Eastern Energy CompanyGTU-CHPP on the base of VladivostokCHPP-2 and Central Steam-Water Boiler Plant
Maya TPP 92.85 MW
Anadyrskaya Gas Engine CHPP 29.65 MW
Yuzhno-Sakhalinskaya CHPP-1 5th power unit-1 91 MW
annual report / 2011
15ABOUT THE COMPANY
GEOGRAPHY
16
annual report / 2011
ABOUT THE COMPANY
JSC PARTICIPATION IN OTHER ORGANIZATIONS
JSC Construction Contractor of Boguchanskaya HPP (51%)
“HYDROOGK ALUMINIUM COMPANY LIMITED”(100%)
JSC Construction Customer of Boguchansk Aluminium Smelter (51%)
Construction Supply
Management Company Non-Core
Repairs Generation
Construction Institute
JSC RUSHYDRO JSC RUSHYDRO
JSC SSGER (100%)
JSC REMIC (100%)
JSC Turboremont VCC (100%)
JSC Hydroremont VCC (100%)
JSC Electroremont VCC (100%)
JSC Leningradskaya PSHPP (100%)
JSC Geotherm (92,79%)
JSC Kolymaenergo (98,76%)
JSC Krasnoyarskaya HPP (0,117%)
JSC Verkhne-Mutnovskaya GeoPP (48,04%)
JSC Karachayevo-Cherkessian HGC (100%)
JSC INTER RAO UES (2,09%)
JSC Yakutskenergo (29,8%)
JSC Pavlodolskaya HPP (100%)
JSC KamHEC (96,58%)
JSC Irkutskenergo (0,01%)
JSC Lenhydroproject (100%)
JSC NIIES (100%)
JSC Vedeneyev VNIIG (100%)
JSC ESCO UES (100%)
JSC Renewable EnergyEngineering Center (100%)
JSC Nizhne-Zeyskaya HPP (100%)
JSC Nizhne-Bureyskaya HPP (100%)
JSC Nizhne-Kureyskaya HPP (100%)
JSC Dalnevostochnaya WPP (100%)
JSC Ust-Srednelanskaya HPP (41,48%)
JSC Sulaksky HydroCascade (100%)
LLC Hydroservice (100%)
JSC Technopark Rumyantsevo (1 share)
JSC GVC Energetiki (42,53%)
JSC ChirkeyGEStroy (75%-1share)
JSC MC Hydro OGC (100%)
JSC RAO Energy Systems of the East (69,28%)share of registered charter capital in compliance
with the Charter
JSC ESC RusHydro (100%- 1 share)
JSC Yuzhno-Yakutsky HEG (100%)
JSC Zaramagskiye HPPs (98,35%)
JSC HydroEnergeneering Siberia(100%)
LLC Energy Index HydroOGC (0,1%)
JSC SS ATC (100%)
JSC SC SSHPP (100%)
JSC UEMC (20,6%)
JSC Zharki (25% + 1 share)
LLC IT Energy Service (19,99%)
“HYDROOGK POWER COMPANY LIMITED”(100%)
JSC DEC (1,04%)
JSC Malaya Dmitrovka (100%)
JSC Construction Customerof Boguchanskaya HPP (49%)
JSC SHPP of Dagestan (100%)
JSC Hydroinvest (100%)
JSC SHPP KCR (100%)
JSC Fiagdonskaya (100%)
JSC Small HPPs of Altay (100%)
LLC Verkhnebalkarskaya SHPP (100%)
JSC Zagorskaya PSHPP-2 (100%)
JSC Boguchanskaya HPP (2,89%)
JSC SEC (17,77%)
JSC Trust Hydromontazh (33,54%)
RUSHYDROINTERNATIONAL B.V. (100%)
RUSSUNHydro limited (50%)
JSC Construction Contractorof Boguchansk Aluminium Smelter (49%)
17
annual report / 2011
ABOUT THE COMPANY
JSC Construction Contractor of Boguchanskaya HPP (51%)
“HYDROOGK ALUMINIUM COMPANY LIMITED”(100%)
JSC Construction Customer of Boguchansk Aluminium Smelter (51%)
Construction Supply
Management Company Non-Core
Repairs Generation
Construction Institute
JSC RUSHYDRO JSC RUSHYDRO
JSC SSGER (100%)
JSC REMIC (100%)
JSC Turboremont VCC (100%)
JSC Hydroremont VCC (100%)
JSC Electroremont VCC (100%)
JSC Leningradskaya PSHPP (100%)
JSC Geotherm (92,79%)
JSC Kolymaenergo (98,76%)
JSC Krasnoyarskaya HPP (0,117%)
JSC Verkhne-Mutnovskaya GeoPP (48,04%)
JSC Karachayevo-Cherkessian HGC (100%)
JSC INTER RAO UES (2,09%)
JSC Yakutskenergo (29,8%)
JSC Pavlodolskaya HPP (100%)
JSC KamHEC (96,58%)
JSC Irkutskenergo (0,01%)
JSC Lenhydroproject (100%)
JSC NIIES (100%)
JSC Vedeneyev VNIIG (100%)
JSC ESCO UES (100%)
JSC Renewable EnergyEngineering Center (100%)
JSC Nizhne-Zeyskaya HPP (100%)
JSC Nizhne-Bureyskaya HPP (100%)
JSC Nizhne-Kureyskaya HPP (100%)
JSC Dalnevostochnaya WPP (100%)
JSC Ust-Srednelanskaya HPP (41,48%)
JSC Sulaksky HydroCascade (100%)
LLC Hydroservice (100%)
JSC Technopark Rumyantsevo (1 share)
JSC GVC Energetiki (42,53%)
JSC ChirkeyGEStroy (75%-1share)
JSC MC Hydro OGC (100%)
JSC RAO Energy Systems of the East (69,28%)share of registered charter capital in compliance
with the Charter
JSC ESC RusHydro (100%- 1 share)
JSC Yuzhno-Yakutsky HEG (100%)
JSC Zaramagskiye HPPs (98,35%)
JSC HydroEnergeneering Siberia(100%)
LLC Energy Index HydroOGC (0,1%)
JSC SS ATC (100%)
JSC SC SSHPP (100%)
JSC UEMC (20,6%)
JSC Zharki (25% + 1 share)
LLC IT Energy Service (19,99%)
“HYDROOGK POWER COMPANY LIMITED”(100%)
JSC DEC (1,04%)
JSC Malaya Dmitrovka (100%)
JSC Construction Customerof Boguchanskaya HPP (49%)
JSC SHPP of Dagestan (100%)
JSC Hydroinvest (100%)
JSC SHPP KCR (100%)
JSC Fiagdonskaya (100%)
JSC Small HPPs of Altay (100%)
LLC Verkhnebalkarskaya SHPP (100%)
JSC Zagorskaya PSHPP-2 (100%)
JSC Boguchanskaya HPP (2,89%)
JSC SEC (17,77%)
JSC Trust Hydromontazh (33,54%)
RUSHYDROINTERNATIONAL B.V. (100%)
RUSSUNHydro limited (50%)
JSC Construction Contractorof Boguchansk Aluminium Smelter (49%)
18
annual report / 2011
KEY 2011 EVENTS
JANUARY
01 Energy supply to the new Kashkhatau HPP to the Russian Unified Energy System began
13 Permission for placing and organizing trading of 50% of the additional issue under State registration number 1-01-55038-E-039D (from 02.12.2010) outside the Russian Federation was granted
18 RusHydro and JSC Power Machines signed a contract to manufacture and supply equipment for the Baksan HPP
19 Tests of the main sites for two unique horizontal bulb units of the Saratov HPP were completed. The design will increase capacity, upgrade water usage efficiency and reduce environmental impact
27 An Energy-efficient Technologies Center, which promotes energy conservation and an energy-efficient lifestyle, was opened in Ryazan
27 Preliminary results for RusHydro Group 2010 production activities were published
28 RusHydro and the Municipal Administration of the Dmitrovsky District, the Moscow Region, signed an agreement on energy conservation and energy efficiency
28 Controlled operations of hydro-power unit No. 3 at the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP was completed. This is the fourth hydro-power unit to be re-launched after the accident
FEBRUARY
07 The launch of the Company’s employee stock option plan, in the amount of 3,178 bln shares, was announced
18 An agreement to develop hydro-power potential and the Krasnoyarsk Region economy was signed
18 The Center for Energy Efficiency was established in Krasnoyarsk. The Center’s priority is to promote modern technologies and energy-saving methods, as well as energy efficiency among residential and industrial consum-ers and utility companies
MARCH
01 Company’s ruble Eurobond offer in October 2010 was rated by EMEA Finance the best among CEE companies in 2010
03 The Board of Directors adopted as a basis a comprehensive program to modernize JSC RusHydro’s generation facilities till 2025, which would optimize activities of the modernization and reconstruction program to accelerate modernization of the generating equipment and automation of manufacturing processes
04 The acquisition of shares of the Krasnoyarskaya HPP was completed and RusHydro Group’s share in charter capital increased to 25.116%
18 The Company’s 2011-2015 Business Plan was approved. Under the Plan, the values of the Company’s annual and quarterly key performance indicators (KPIs), quarterly financial and assimilation of the 2011 CAPEX plan and the 2011-2013 cost control program were approved
23 The Company’s 2010 audited financial statements, prepared in accordance with Russian Accounting Standards (RAS), were published
24 A deal to purchase 90% of shares in CJSC International Energy Corporation (IEC) was completed. The core asset of IEC is the Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade of HPPs in Armenia
24 The Board of Directors approved transactions for exchanging shares in JSC OGK-1 to shares of the additional is-sue of JSC INTER RAO UES
KEY 2011 EVENTS
19
annual report / 2011
KEY 2011 EVENTS
APRIL
01 The placement of the additional issue of ordinary shares under State registration number 1-01-55038-E-039D (from 02.12.2010) was completed. In total, 1.6 billion shares were placed, representing 86.41% of the total number of additional shares
07 Installed capacity of the Volzhskaya HPP increased 5 MW, due to implementation of the program to modernize and reconstruct the HPP
13 The thermal circuit was installed above hydro-power units for the start-up complex of the Boguchanskaya HPP. This is an important step in HPP construction
25 The placement of Series 01 and 02 bonds in the amount of 15 billion rubles was successfully completed. Place-ment was at comparable levels to traded bonds of first-tier issuers with investment grade ratings
27 Audited 2010 financials, prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), were published for the RusHydro Group
29 The Company’s Q1 2011 financial results, prepared in accordance with Russian Accounting Standards (RAS), were published
MAY
10 The reconstruction stage for the oldest HPPs of the Volzhsko-Kamsky Cascade was completed. At the Uglichskaya HPP, a new hydro-power unit (number 2) was put into operation
17 RusHydro and Alstom Hydro France, LLC Alstom and JSC HST signed the primary contract for the comprehensive reconstruction and modernization of the Cascade of Kubanskiye HPPs
23 The 2011 charitable and sponsorship activities program, valued at 91 million rubles, was approved
27 Shares of the additional issue under State registration number 1-01-55038-E-039D (from 02.12.2010) were listed on the "A" quotation list of the MICEX Stock Exchange
27 Amendments to the charter relating to the Company’s increase in charter capital were registered
31 New parameters for the investment component in 2011 power tariffs were defined
JUNE
14 Hydro-power unit number 1 at the Irganayskaya HPP was put into commercial operation
15 RusHydro and the Reykjavík Geothermal Company signed a cooperation agreement and defined basic cooperation terms for geo-thermal energy
17 RusHydro and Voith Hydro signed documents on cooperation and commercial contracts. The aggregate investment of the parties will be more than 1 billion euros
21 RusHydro Group and Alstom signed a SHA on forming a joint venture to manufacture hydro-power and auxiliary equipment in Russia
30 An energy efficiency center was opened in Krasnoyarsk
30 The Company held its 2010 Annual General Meeting of Shareholders, which adopted the annual report and annual financial statements, made a decision to pay dividends for 2010 and increase the charter capital, approved the restated Charter and a new version of the Regulation on the Procedure for Convening and Holding Meetings of the Board of Directors and also approved interested-party transactions
20
annual report / 2011
KEY 2011 EVENTS
JULY
08 Hydro-power unit number 2 at the Irganayskaya HPP was put into commercial operation
15 RusHydro and the Russian Ministry of Agriculture and the Government of the Stavropol Region signed an agree-ment on land reclamation cooperation
15 JSC RusHydro was recognized as having the best investor relations in the energy sector by “Thomson Reuters Extel Europe-2011” and the specialized magazine “IR Magazine Russia & CIS.” In the same survey, Yevgeny Dod, the Company’s Chairman of the Management Board, was named one of the top three top managers for the CIS’ largest companies
18 JSC Boguchanskaya HPP obtained the status of wholesale market participant, which will allow it (once it is in operation) to sell electricity and power on the wholesale market
18 JSC RusHydro and JSC SO UES concluded the agreement on reactive power regulation with no energy generation
29 The Board of Directors of the Company approved a decision on the additional issue of ordinary shares and the Company's issue prospectus. At par value, the issue totaled RUR 89 billion
AUGUST
02 The Company’s H1 2011 financial results, prepared in accordance with Russian Accounting Standards (RAS), were published
02 New version of the 2011-2015 Innovative Development Program (with the outlook for 2021) was approved
16 An additional share issue of 89 billion rubles placed via open subscription was registered It has a State registration number of 1-01-55038-E-040D
30 The 2010 payment of dividends on ordinary shares was completed. The total dividends paid were 2.5 billion rubles
30 The Board of Directors approved borrowing up to 40 billion rubles to implement strategy to expand the Com-pany's business via the acquisition of energy assets
SEPTEMBER
02 The Company’s new Technical policy was approved. Policy implementation will create a new modernization pro-cess level for industrial and technological assets
05 The placement of the additional share issue under State registration number 1-01-55038-E-040D (from 08.16.2011) began
12 Fitch confirmed the Company’s long-term BB+ credit rating and its positive outlook
12 RusHydro completed transaction to acquire 100% share capital of LLC Energy Supply Company of Bashkortostan (LLC ESCB) from JSC Bashkirenergo
26 The Kolyma River was dammed up at the Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP site (which is still under construction)
OCTOBER
04 The H1 2011 financial results for the RusHydro Group, in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), were published
03-04 In accordance with the Government Order, 5 dams of the Angara Cascade were contributed to RusHydro share capital as payment for its additional share issue
12 Within the framework of implementing the investment project to reconstruct the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP, RusHydro and the Government of the Republic of Khakassia signed a cooperation agreement. Total project CAPEX will be approximately 45 billion rubles
12 The shore spillway of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP was commissioned
24 A coupon on Series 01 and 02 bonds, totaling 598 million rubles, was paid
31 The Company’s 9M 2011 financial results, prepared in accordance with Russian Accounting Standards (RAS), were published
21
annual report / 2011
KEY 2011 EVENTS
NOVEMBER
03 JSC RusHydro was mentioned as top Russia’s fastest-growing energy companies, according to Platts Agency, which is a leading global energy and metals information provider; the Company also ranked fifth in Platts’ list of the top 50 global energy companies
07 The results of the purchase of additional shares (State registration number 1-01-55038-E-040D (dated 16.08.2011) by the Company’s shareholders, as a result of exercising their pre-emptive rights under which shareholders acquired 29.7% or 26.4 billion shares, were summarizedThe execution of its preemptive right resulted in acquisition of interest in several companies, including RAO ES of the East and the dams on the Angara River
10 The Company obtained a passport of readiness for the 2011-2012 autumn-winter period
16 A ceremonial laying of the first cubic meter of concrete in the foundation of the Barsuchkovsky Small HPP (in the Stavropol Region) was held, with the participation of the Russian Deputy Prime Minister I.I.Sechin
22 The charitable program recognized as the winner in the annual All-Russian project “2011 leaders in Russian corporate philanthropy” was JSC RusHydro’s “Sail of Hope” program
DECEMBER
01 By replacing the hydro-power unit with a more powerful one, installed capacity at the Uglichskaya HPP increased 10 MW. The general contractor was Voith Hydro (an Austrian company)
05 The 2012-2015 Comprehensive program for upgrading the Group’s generating facilities was adopted. As part of the program, RusHydro will replace up to 50% of total turbines, 40% of generators and 60% of transformers at its HPPs
16 The consortium of the Russian Institute of Directors and Expert RA raised the Company's corporate governance rating to 7 +, which corresponds with “developed corporate governance practices”
19 RusHydro and the Austrian company Voith Hydro signed a contract for the supply of impellers to modernize hydro-power turbines at the Miatlynskaya HPP in the Company’s Dagestan branch
19 With the participation of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, hydro-power unit No. 1 at the Sayano-Shushen-skaya HPP was put into operation
19 RusHydro and the Government of the Republic of Khakassia signed a contract under which the Company will receive State support in the form of tax breaks for the investment project “Restoration of the Sayano-Shushen-skaya HPP”
19 The 2012 Insurance coverage program was adopted
28 For 2011, electric power output at the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP was more than 18 billion kWh and reached the pre-accident capacity utilization level
EVENTS AFTER THE REPORTING DATE
The Company approved its 2012 growth priorities
The Company signed a memorandum on cooperation with the Government of the Krasnoyarsk Region to construct the Nizhne-Kureyskaya HPP, with an installed capacity of 150 MW
The Company completed drilling a development well at the Mutnovskoye Field. Commissioning this field will enhance the capacity of the Mutnovsky GeoPP by engaging additional capacities of the geo-thermal heating agent
The Company commissioned the new hydro-unit No. 7 at the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP
RusHydro was included as a strategic entity in accordance with changes in the List of Strategic Entities and Strategic Joint Stock Companies, as approved by Decree No.1009 by the Russian President (dated August 4th, 2004)
22
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY
The Company will make a difference in:• A multi-focused engineering complex capable of driving
highly effective competitive RES development, both in Russia and abroad;
• An established retail business that ensures high quality service and undisrupted consumer supply;
• Equipment and supply manufacturers within the Company, alongside major energy-intensive consumers;
• A balanced business portfolio that builds the Company’s maximum value;
• Fast rates for introducing innovations – across technical and technological solutions, as well as management systems.
The Company is the State’s key agent in implementing hy-dro-power development projects in accordance with Russia’s Energy Strategy for the Period till 2030 and is also a consoli-dation platform for the Russian hydro-power industry.Strategic activities of the Company’s management team are focused in numerous key areas:
Hydro-power generationThe guaranteed reliability and renovation of existing assets is a key task for hydro-power generation and will primar-ily be addressed via technical upgrades and reconstruction programs, restoration of the Company’s Sayano-Shushens-kaya HPP and construction of the second stage of the coast-al spillway, as well as creation of a service center for HPP monitoring and maintenance, switching over to long-term contracts for equipment maintenance and delivery and the rapid introduction of innovations. At the same time, the Company plans to undertake active measures to optimize HPP operating modes and to increase electricity and power sales from its operating assets. The Company’s hydro-pow-er generation assets will be expanded by launching new ca-pacities at hydro-power plants (HPPs) and pumped storage power plants (PSPPs), as well as by gaining control/acquir-ing shareholdings in hydro-power generation companies.
Engineering and R&DKey engineering tasks include: upgrading R&D competen-cies; creating a full-service EPC(M) sub-contractor in the hydro-power industry (holding a competitive edge in for-eign markets); optimizing design timeframes, upgrading the quality of project solutions and reducing construction costs and timeframes for new corporate facilities.RusHydro also plans to achieve a marked efficiency im-provement in repair and maintenance services offered to corporate assets by developing and introducing a target model for repair and maintenance organizations and by switching over to long-term partnerships with repair ser-vice providers.
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY
RUSHYDRO’S STRATEGYThe Strategic Plan till 2015 and future development till 2020, as approved by the Company’s Board of Directors in 2010, outlines a wide range of strategic areas for corporate development.
Strategic Aims: • To upgrade energy efficiency by developing sustainable
energy including RES;• To ensure the reliable and safe performance of the
Company’s facilities;• To increase the Company’s value.
For the 2020 horizon year, JSC RusHydro is a global transnational vertically integrated holding company and world’s leader in RES development
The Company boasts unique advantages that leave it well-positioned to strengthen its growth and enhance its role both domestically and abroad:• Clean power generation: the renewable nature and
environmental friendliness of sources used in production;• Energy efficient production: hydro-power guarantees
the reduced dependence of Russian electricity costs on organic fuel, as this power generation has no fuel component;
• Basis for system reliability: HPPs perform system-forming functions, alongside functions of immediate (highly maneuverable capacities) and strategic reserves for power production and the guaranteed reliable performance of the unified energy system (HPPs with long-term storage reservoirs);
• Driver of renewable energy innovation: a priority focus on technical upgrades, which promote R&D and the practical implementation of new power generation technologies utilizing RES;
• State-of-the-art management with extensive experience in creating and managing hydro-power assets, including the foreign markets.
23
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY
Water utilizationRusHydro’s expanded operations in the hydro-economic sector can open up new corporate opportunities and in-troduce a range of synergistic benefits with key corporate businesses. In line with this, RusHydro will study possibili-ties for entering the respective markets via pilot projects.
Human resourcesRusHydro sees human resources development (across all its businesses) as a strategic avenue. In order to ensure adequate long-, mid- and short-term human resources, the Company has implemented growth programs aimed at early professional training and additional education of schoolchildren to encourage their engineering competen-cies, establishing the system of target training in educa-tional institutions, restoring the resource of workers with secondary technical education and reinforcing relationships with industry-related higher education establishments and research institutes.
Retail power salesKey activities in this area include: enhancing the Company’s presence and sales across retail electricity markets, driven by acquiring shares in retail power sales companies, as well as by maintaining and expanding the customer base and attracting new large consumers.One of JSC RusHydro’s priorities in this sphere is to form on the basis of JSC ESK RusHydro (a 100%-owned subsidiary of the Company) retail power sales companies providing integrated services in power supplies, power savings, public utilities and other services (multi-utility companies).
Innovations and energy efficiencyAn effective system for managing and developing innova-tions with a strong upside potential, including those outlined in Russia’s Energy Strategy till 2030, will deliver greater competitive advantages to RusHydro and drive additional successful corporate evolution. Key measures in this sphere include: creating a program for innovation-based devel-opment, establishing an innovation R&D center; creating a scientific center for upgrading design and construction technology; developing engineering foresight and monitor-ing systems for new technologies and innovations; and cre-ating a knowledge management system.
Renewable energyA key measure that underpins Russia’s effective RES devel-opment is creating normative documentation that provides incentives for RES usage. In conjunction with this, special activities to promote corporate technological and technical conditions that contribute to RES development are required to drive large-scale construction of small hydro-power plants (HPPs), wind power plants (WPPs), geo-thermal power plants (GeoPPs), bio-fuel-based energy facilities and tidal power plant projects using the most sophisticated for-eign technologies in this field.
International activitiesIn accordance with foreign energy policy targets outlined by Russia’s Energy Strategy till 2030, the Russian hydro-power industry will be integrated into the global energy market. In the medium-term, RusHydro plans to implement inte-grated infrastructure investment projects abroad, provide hydro-power asset management services and engineering and hydro-power maintenance services; promote bi-lateral cooperation with foreign electricity, design, engineering and power machine building companies and set up experience exchange cooperation to introduce hydro-power and RES innovations and new technologies.
24
annual report / 2011
Current situation Development plans of JSC RAO ES of the East
The inability to influence the load of RusHydro hydro-generating assets and efficient heat generating facilities of JSC RAO ES of the East due to existing grid limits
Construction of new energy transmission lines and sub-stations with newest equipment and reconstruction and technical modernization of outdated electric grid facilities
High depreciation of generating and grid assets in the Far East region
Modernization of existing and construction of new electric plants with newest energy equipment
High cost of fuel due to strong monopolization of the market and complicated transport conditions
Gasification of plants and replacement of the expensive transported fuel with natural gas extracted in the regions, development of operations in the sphere of energy efficiency, innovations and renewable energy
Low indicators of operating indicators of the companies of RAO ES of the East holding company
Optimization of regimes of operations of the equipment of energy systems of the Far East by means of bigger load of HPPs and reduced condensation output of TPPs, entrance to new markets including Chinese market.
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY
Strategic indicator 2015 target
Reliability criteria compliance No accidents
Launch of new HPP capacities and the capacities of acquired/managed hydro-power as-sets
10 GW
Launch of RES capacities approx. 140 MW
Total installed RES capacity currently in the design document development stage 500 MW at small HPPs,1,000 MW at WPPs
Annual electricity output 113 billion kWh
TOP GROWTH PRIORITIES OF THE COMPANYThe Board of Directors annually approves Growth Priorities which are one of the tools to implement JSC RusHydro’s Strategic Plan and include the list of key objectives and events viewed as priorities on the annual horizon.The 2011 List of Growth Priorities approved by the Board of Directors on February 24, 2011 (Minutes No. 118) covers the objectives aimed at ensuring reliability and safety of operating hydropower facilities, implementing investment projects, M&A projects and Innovative Development Pro-gram, boosting energy efficiency, developing engineering, research and water facilities of JSC RusHydro and expan-ding the operation of renewable energy sources.On February 29, 2012, the Board of Directors approved the report on meeting the 2011 Growth Priorities of the Com-pany (Minutes No. 144).
INTEGRATION OF JSC RAO ES OF THE EASTAccording to RusHydro’s strategic plan until 2015 and the outlook until 2020, RusHydro’s tasks include: corporate
consolidation of hydro-power assets with the implementa-tion of initiatives related to acquiring shares or receipts of hydro-generating assets under management in 2010-2012.As part of the Company’s strategy and in accordance with Russian Government Decree № 1174-r (from July 7th, 2011), shares of JSC RAO ES of the East which belonged to the Russian Federation were transferred in payment for additional shares of RusHydro in October 2011. Thus, as of December 31st, 2011, the Company’s share in JSC RAO ES of the East was 69.3160%. The transfer of a controlling interest in JSC RAO ES of the East to the property of RusHy-dro will provide a systematic and comprehensive approach to developing and upgrading power generation in Siberia and the Far East, improving energy security and electricity supply reliability.Prior to becoming a part of RusHydro, the investment plans of JSC RAO ES of the East were limited to maintaining exist-ing power facilities; a chronic lack of funding for moderni-zation and energy infrastructure construction did not allow for resolving key problems related to the functioning of the Unified Energy System of the East (UES of the East):
PROGRESS ACROSS MAIN DEVELOPMENT AREAS IS ILLUSTRATED BY THE FOLLOWING TARGET INDICATORS
25
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY
Currently, UES of the East’s HPPs are underutilized because it is necessary to utilize existing thermal power plants op-erating in the basic mode. By combining HPPs and thermal power plants into a single control loop, it becomes possible to implement staged organizational and technical measures to replace inefficient production capacities with efficient power generation. Single control and capacity utilization optimization will gradually allow for the removal of worn-out inefficient thermal power plants.Furthermore, this approach will allow for the sale of un-claimed surplus electricity from the domestic market on ex-ternal Northeast Asian (NEA) markets. In conjunction with energy consumption growth in China and Japan, and as a part of attracting strategic equity investors for RusHydro, one of Russia’s strategic goals is to build new effective gen-erating capacity in the Far East and to create modern export energy bridges.
The cross-border export of electricity and capacities of the HPPs of the UES of the East is undertaken via the export contract operator – JSC INTER RAO UES (JSC Eastern Ener-gy Company). In case of an increased volume of cross-border exports by UES of the East, electricity and capacity exports from the Bureyskaya and Zeiskaya HPPs, located in the Amur Region, can be assured for availability of up to 400 MW.In implementing the investment projects on construction of the Nyzhne-Bureyskaya HPP(320 MW) and the Nyzhne-Zeiskaya HPP (400 MW) in the Amur Region, the volume of electricity and capacity export if unclaimed in the domestic market, can increase power output up to about 200 MW.
ACHIEVING STRATEGIC ADVANTAGES
For RusHydro For RAO ES of the East
Significant synergistic benefit from the interaction between RusHydro and JSC RAO ES of the East, particularly in the Magadan, Kamchatka and Yakutia Regions with the investment of additional income in infrastructure construction projects of the Ust-Srednekamskaya HPP and the Nyzhne-Bureyskaya and Nyzhne-Zeiskaya HPPs, as well as comprehensive modernization of the Vilyui HPPs Cascade
Achieving an operational synergistic effect for the production capabilities of JSC RAO ES of the East
Greater use of opportunities to enter into long-term electricity (capacity) supply contracts with new large industrial consumers in the region
Jointly implementing a comprehensive investment program to modernize and reconstruct JSC RAO ES of the East
Coordinating the system safety program in the operation of all facilities of JSC RAO ES of the East, including effectively monitoring production capabilities, controlling the timeliness and adequacy of repairs
Introducing new technologies received from RusHydro via its cooperation with leading Russian and foreign engineering centers, including the use of the modern design and scientific complex of RusHydro (Institute Hydro-project, Lengidroproekt, Mosoblgidroproekt, NIIES, VNIIG Vedeneeva B.I), into the existing production capabilities of JSC RAO ES of the East
26
annual report / 2011
Upgrading the efficiency of control over the implementation of JSC RAO ES of the East’s investment program
Increasing the Company’s shareholder value via the integrated management of an effective public company
Encouraging a cost increase of RusHydro in the interests of its shareholders, including the Russian Federation – the largest RusHydro shareholder, providing a framework for maximizing revenue from the privatization of shares of RusHydro owned by the Russian Federation
Using retail divisions of JSC RAO ES of the East in conjunction with JSC ED RusHydro (a 100%-owned subsidiary of RusHydro) to increase opportunities for the formation of energy service companies, providing comprehensive services in electricity supply, heating, energy conservation, utilities and other services
More efficiently implementing joint business projects with Russia’s largest steel groups;
Receiving added value via RusHydro’s participation in the chain of energy businesses in the Far Eastern Federal District (from power generation to electricity retail)
Implementing a comprehensive interaction scheme with a strategic investor via the sale of State and treasury shares of RusHydro and a minority interest in Far Eastern assets
In cooperation with JSC RAO ES of the East to ensure attracting new large customers in the region and energy supply
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY
Company profileJSC RAO ES of the East was established July 1st, 2008, as a spin-off due to the re-organization of RAO UES of Russia. In accordance with re-organization terms, on July 1st, 2008, shares of JSC RAO ES of the East were placed with RAO UES of Russia shareholders.JSC RAO ES of the East is a vertically integrated energy company that combines electricity and thermal energy pro-duction, dispatch control, transmission and the distribution of energy, sales, repair and service activities. JSC RAO ES of the East is the largest energy company in Russia’s Far East. The Company operates in all regions of the Far East Federal District (FEFD), with an area covering 33% of Russia’s total territory, including nine regions: the Republic of Sakha (Ya-kutia), the Kamchatka Region, the Primorsky Territory, the Khabarovsk Region, the Amur Region, the Magadan Region,
the Sakhalin Region, the Jewish Autonomous Region and the Chukotka Autonomous District. The population of the Far East is approximately 7.168 million people. This region has significant potential for energy consumption growth due to the extraction of non-ferrous metals, the develop-ment of oil and gas deposits and the formation of a unified transportation system. Development of the Far East Federal District and its infrastructure represents a priority task on an all-Russian scale.
Subsidiaries and affiliated companies of JSC RAO ES of the East are backbone enterprises in all regions of the FEFD. The RAO ES of the East Holding includes energy companies of the Eastern Unified Energy System, power supply com-panies (AO-energo), energy service companies and non-core assets.
27
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY’S STRATEGY
Chukotenergo
153 МВ
Мagadanenergo
320 МВ
Каmchatskenergo
462 МВ
Yakutskenergo
1,480 МВ
Sakhalinenergo
480 МВ
UES of the East
5,901 МВ
SUBSIDIARIES AND DEPENDENT COMPANIES (SDCS) OF THE HOLDING RAO ES OF THE EAST
2 0 1 12 0 1 1
2.1
2.2
RusHydro
an
nu
al
rep
ort
2 0 1 1
RISKS
INDUSTRY REVIEW
30
annual report / 2011
RISKS
system aimed at ensuring reliability of plants operation, boosting environmental safety and energy efficiency of pro-duction, generation safety and labor protection quality, as well as improvement of management information on Com-pany’s risk profile and efforts made to optimize risks and establish risk focused management culture. The Risk Management Board regularly works with Compa-ny employees, both in the main office and its branches and affiliates, to continuously improve their training and com-petency in risk management and engage them in training seminars and conferences in Russia and abroad.
COUNTRY RISKSThe Company operates in the Russian Federation and there-fore, is influenced by economic and political risks inherent in Russia.Russia holds investment-grade ratings from leading inter-national rating agencies. These ratings on the one hand re-flect the Country’s low level of public debt and high external liquidity and on the other hand demonstrate high political risk, which significantly limits ratings increases.Russia is particularly dependent on global commodity price fluctuations, and a fall in natural gas and oil prices can slow Russian economic development. In addition, global financial problems can lead to a decline in foreign investment in Rus-sia. These factors may constrain the Company’s access to funding sources and may adversely affect the purchasing power of consumers for the Company’s products.In addition to economic factors, the political situation in Russia (the State is the Company’s largest shareholder), the creation of obstacles for effective bureaucratic reform, inconsistent and frequent changes in tax and currency leg-islation, imperfections in the judicial system and high levels of depreciation for infrastructure facilities in the energy and transportation spheres may negatively impact corporate activities.
INDUSTRY RISKSThe Russian power sector underwent reform, leading di-rectly to the creation of a liberalized electricity market in 2011, where all energy (with the temporary exception of sales to the general population, as well as in non-price and isolated zones) is sold at free market prices based on mar-ket supply and demand.Norms regulating the activities of Russian energy compa-nies, including: market liberalization, the establishment of electricity tariffs, power market operations and the system of relationships between electricity producers and consum-ers, are being significantly changed.Due to the on-going reform process and uncertainty related
RISKS
RISK MANAGEMENT POLICYThe Company’s activities are associated with a number of risks, which under certain circumstances may affect the Company’s production and financial results, social and nat-ural environment. To reduce the negative impact of poten-tial risks and optimize valuable opportunities, a risk man-agement system aimed at ensuring implementation of the Company’s strategy was created.To optimize its response to risks, the Company constantly works on recognizing, assessing and managing, as well as developing and implementing measures to respond to risks and business continuity management. According to ISO 31000 and ISO 31010 international risk management standards and COSO ERM principles, a new internal control and risk management policy was adopted. For risk manage-ment, the Company established an internal control and risk management unit.Within the Company, risk management is a part of the stra-tegic management process and the staff motivation system. Quantitative and qualitative risk assessment tools include: modern methods for assessing potential losses, based on statistics, engineering analyses and financial mathematics.The Company forms a strategic risk register, which it up-dates annually. Based on the Register, a risk management action plan is developed and implemented. The Company created databases for different types of risks. The Company created a crisis situation warning system and a staff hotline. To technologically support the risk management process, a project for an automated internal control and risk manage-ment system is being implemented.In 2011, according to the results of assessment of the Company’s operational risk management system the con-formity with features of an advanced approach to risk management under Annex A to ISO31000: 2009 was identified.In 2010, JSC RusHydro sponsored and carried out a survey of all Company’s generating branches (19 branches). The survey was carried out by SUREGROVE LIMITED, an inde-pendent company, Great Britain, together with top global insurance companies. The survey contains an unbiased independent technical assessment of the facilities, safety and security of Company’s generating assets operation and exposure to any insured events. The reports by the independent surveyor were distributed to the international insurance market for an impartial risk assessment. As a result, the whole range of top global lead-ers in the insurance market decided to engage in the rein-surance programs related to JSC RusHydro’s assets.The Company continuously develops its risk management
31
annual report / 2011
RISKS
transaction there are negative impacts on an asset.In connection with contribution of the control stake of JSC RAO ES of the East to the Company’s equity capital in Oc-tober 2011, the risks connected with deficit of funds for modernization and construction of the energy infrastructure of the Far East due to increased level of operational risks related to ageing of equipment and depreciation of fixed assets of the purchased company became topical. To man-age this type of risk, the Company took measures aimed at integration of JSC RAO ES of the East into RusHydro Group; the Company continues working on:• on implementation in JSC RAO ES of the East the
methodology of management of the operational life of the asset on the basis RCM implemented in the Company; it will allow to better control the status of the production facilities of JSC RAO ES of the East,
• on implementation of a warning system in the production facilities of JSC RAO ES of the East.
Moreover, the Company works on attraction of additional financing for reconstruction of existing and construction of new generating facilities and electric energy and heat trans-mission lines, as well s for repair of the fixed assets of JSC RAO ES of the East. In conditions of deficit of funds for im-plementation of the Company’s investment program these risks may become topical for the Company in the future.
Risk of reduced proceeds from the sale of electricity and powerThe risk is significant because of a growing social burden and State restrictions on growth rates for electricity prices and power, as well as the existence of financial covenants, which impose certain restrictions on the Company’s acti-vities.This risk is the inability to accurately predict the volume of electricity produced in both the medium- and long-term. Basically, this risk impacts the execution of liabilities to sup-ply energy to the New Wholesale Electric Energy/Capacity Market (NWECM).Risk optimization is implemented as part of JSC RusHydro’s production and marketing activities via the following mea-sures:• Developing its own hydro-meteorological monitoring
system to upgrade the accuracy of forecasting and tracking available water resources at RusHydro sites, which are not secured by qualitative prognostic information;
• Protecting the interests of HPPs in inter-agency operative groups under the Federal Agency for Water Resources;
• Implementing measures under the “Optimization of water resource usage” of JSC RusHydro’s energy conservation program.
• Concluding bilateral hedging RSV (day ahead market) – related contracts (including the purchase of electricity to ensure the execution of obligations).
to its completion and ultimate scope, the Russian electri city market has undergone radical changes and continues to op-erate under relatively uncertain conditions.
RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH CORPORATE ACTIVITIESIn today’s conditions, risks associated with developing and operating the largest hydro-power company, taking into ac-count wear and tear of funds and technology, aging and lack of qualified personnel, as well as possible emergencies, are relevant to the Company.For 2011, we can highlight the following risks that the Com-pany paid more attention to – risks associated with merg-ers and acquisitions, risks related to the security of the Company’s facilities and risks associated with implementing modernization projects. In connection with the completion of corporate organizational changes, the risks of delays and mistakes in management decisions were reduced.
The risk of M&A failuresThis risk is relevant in connection with the Company’s ac-tivities on the M&A market, including the integration of RAO ES of the East (which was recently acquired by the Com-pany) business processes. The principal risk factors are:• Revaluation of shares of the acquired company;• Under-estimation of the amount of additional investments;• Acquisition of insolvent financial companies;• Decline in stock prices for the companies involved in the
merger/acquisitions;• Deteriorating market position and financial condition
for the period up to the completion of the merger/acquisitions;
• Lack of State support;• Non-optimal integration of business processes and
assets;• Non-transparent business processes for the acquired
company;• Loss of control over the acquired company;• Conflicts of interest and employee disloyalty from the
acquired company;• Structural complication of assets due to the acquired
company;• Uncertainty of the acquired company in new market
segments;• Deterioration in asset and liability quality for the acquired
company.
The Company is working to upgrade methods and proce-dures for implementing mergers and acquisitions, includ-ing making adjustments in transaction terms if during the
32
annual report / 2011
RISKS
Risk related to the construction of alternative energy supply facilitiesA key focus of the Russian energy industry reform is creating competition in energy generation and supply across Russia. The alternative energy supply facilities constructed by large consumers may result in growing competition and reduced energy generation and supply volumes by the Company. In order to mitigate such risk, the Company reaches out to its end-users to establish beneficial and sustainable rela-tions, increase performance by implementing cost cutting programs, increase the share of long-term energy supply contracts in the total number of concluded contracts and implement a consistent financial policy.
The risk of market fluctuations and investment project parametersThis risk is critical to the Company, primarily due to the high conservation cost for investment projects; however, the most likely damage from implementation of the risk does not exceed 10-15% of the annual investment program. The essential facts of cost overruns can lead to the need to re-distribute investment resources, which in turn can lead to a negative revaluation of the Company’s market value by shareholders and investors.Risk factors are: higher equipment and supply prices, poor project documentation quality, adverse changes in currency exchange rates, the high cost of conservation for an invest-ment project and the poor quality of equipment (low tech-nological culture of producers).To reduce the negative impact, the Company is working in the following areas:• Developing a corporate project management system to
systematize data for both existing and designed projects;• Optimizing the insurance and procurement system
related to construction and assembly work;• Strengthening the role of its own design institutes in the
internal review of project and working documentation;• Developing a supplied equipment quality control system
(including the process of its production and shipment / delivery).
Risks of fund shortages from external sources for investmentThe risk is significant due to possible consequences for the Company, owing to a simultaneous reduction in all or a por-tion of funding sources. An acute shortage of investment funds may lead to a scenario in which the Company will be forced to stop construction or mothball numerous generat-ing facilities under construction that affect the economic ef-ficiency of both the Company’s investment projects and its financial results as a whole.The sustainable management of this risk involves maintain-ing sufficient cash and the availability of financial resources via the provision of credit lines. The Company adheres to
a balanced model of financing floating capital through both short- and long-term sources. Temporary surplus funds are placed in short-term financial instruments, mainly in bank deposits and promissory notes.To level out this risk, the Company implemented a system of monitoring contracts by introducing and applying “standard financial terms” when negotiating with contractors and de-veloped management techniques for interest and currency risks (taking into account the Company’s credit policy). The Company is working on preparing flood zones for reservoirs of constructed HPPs from federal budgetary resources and budgets of constituent entities of the Russian Federation.
The risk of man-made accidentsThe risks are associated with high levels of wear and tear, the breach of exploitation conditions, untimely repairs and re-tooling and modernization. Equipment failure and water-works destruction can be caused by the implementation of these risks.According to a corporate assessment, the risk probability is at an average level. All major production facilities of the Company are insured. A range of measures to ensure the reliability of equipment and facilities at an adequate level include:• Fully implemented repairs; the fulfillment of a long-term
modernization and reconstruction program as approved by the Company’s Board of Directors;
• The use of modern diagnostic methods without stopping equipment, modern technologies of production asset management, including necessary information technology, continuously optimizing the structure and size of spare parts volume;
• Continually developing the process of life-cycle management for equipment in the existing HPP system.
Environmental risksEnvironmental risks include the possibility of oil leaks into rivers from hydro-power units of HPPs, as well as the pos-sibility of exceeding marks for the dam (reservoir) in the upper and lower ponds. Excess reservoir levels at the upper or lower mark may flood coastal zones, where production facilities, residential buildings and natural systems are lo-cated.To reduce these risks, the Company is replacing the com-ponents and assemblies of the HPPs’ hydro-turbines with modern ones; this construction ensures a high degree of ecological compatibility with production. Reservoir level regulation is carried out in strict accordance with a sched-ule issued by the inter-agency operative group. To prevent flooding, dyke dams and protective installations are used.To further upgrade environmental protection activities, the Company has implemented an environmental management system under the ISO-14001-2004 standard.
33
annual report / 2011
RISKS
curity regimes. In conjunction with law enforcement agen-cies, theft prevention measures are organized. The most dangerous threats are assessed and plans are developed to eliminate consequences, in conjunction with the Rus-sian Civil Defense and Emergency Situations Agency at the Company’s generating assets.The Company’s fixed assets insurance package includes in-surance against acts of terror and sabotage. In order to of-fer risks of terror acts and sabotage on the insurance mar-kets, the Company disclosed information on the protection of its operated facilities against the threats of terrorism and sabotage and funding its efforts to establish a comprehen-sive security system. This enabled the Company to ensure an efficient protection of its property interests against ter-rorist acts and sabotage risks.The Company held a road-show to mitigate negative effects on positioning the occurring insured events related to the sabotage risk on the international insurance market.
Earthquake-prone areasSeismic hazards in areas in which the Company’s facilities are located is not significant.
Seasonal flooding areasThe risk of seasonal floods plays an important role in corpo-rate activities. To manage this, water regime management, including: forecasting and warning, reservoir regulation, spillway construction and operation and other measures, is implemented.
INFORMATION ABOUT POSSIBLE CIRCUMSTANCES THAT OBJECTIVELY HAMPER THE COMPANY’S ACTIVITYActs of terrorismDue to the tense political and social situation, the revival of armed gangs in the North Caucasus, a high probability of local and regional armed conflict, a growing threat of inter-national terrorism (including on the eve of the 2014 Olym-pics), increased political instability in several developing countries due to the economic crisis, the activity of radical organizations and the development of industrial terrorism, the Company is concerned about possible risks associated with terrorist activity, including at the Company’s sites lo-cated in this region.To reduce these risks, the Company constantly carries out measures to ensure safety. A comprehensive program to ensure that the Company’s facilities are safe and protect-ed from terrorism was developed and implemented. The Company regularly inspects anti-terrorism protection and conducts staff trainings, including specialized anti-terrorism exercises and trainings for security guards at the Compa-ny’s facilities.Interaction Plans exist with law enforcement authorities to prevent the commission of terrorist acts or the threat of terrorist acts at the Company’s facilities. On the territory of the enterprises, there are access regimes and internal se-
34
annual report / 2011
Source: IEA, 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
As of January 1st, 2012, the installed capacity of Russian UES power plants was 218,145.8 MW. In terms of installed capac-ity, the share of thermal power plants (TPPs) is approximately 68.4%, the share of hydro-power plants (HPPs) is 20.3% and the share of nuclear power plants (NPPs) is 11.1%.
INDUSTRY REVIEW
THE ELECTRICITY AND CAPACITY MARKETTotal installed capacity and generation in Russia and worldwide
Globally, the Russian energy industry ranks fourth in terms of installed capacity and production volume.
PRODUCTION
CAPACITY
USAChinaJapanRussiaIndia
GermanyCanada
0 200 400 600 800 1,000GW
1,027874
284220
176147
131
USAChinaJapanRussiaIndia
GermanyCanada
0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 4,000bln kWh
4,1653,696
1,041990
899586603
35
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
In 2011, the installed capacity of Russian UES power plants increased to 4,907.3 MW via the commissioning of new generating equipment and the modernization of existing generating equipment at power plants. Generating equip-ment at Russian UES power plants with a total capacity of 1,507.2 MW was decommissioned.
DISTRIBUTION BY GENERATION TYPE
TPPs
HPPs
NPPs
.
11.2%
20.4%68.4%
Historical energy consumptionSince 1998, except for the 2009 crisis, Russia has experienced energy consumption growth.
1,050
1,000
950
900
850
800
750
700
6%
4%
2%
0%
–2%
–4%
–6%
–8%
–10%
Energy consumption in the UES of Russia, bln kWh
Energy consumption dynamics
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
–1.3%
–6.0%–5.6%
–9.0%
–1.9%–1.3%–1.6%
–0.5%
3.0%
4.0%
1.3%
0.3%
2.9%2.3%
1.8%
4.5%
–4.7%
4.9%
1.1%
2.3%2.0%
Bln kWh
Source: SO UES
Source: SO UES
36
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
The structure of the electricity (capacity) marketCurrently, the Russian Federation has a two-level (whole-sale and retail) electricity (capacity) market.Generating companies, electricity export/import operators, retail organizations, power distribution companies (in terms of purchasing electricity to cover transmission losses) and large consumers are buyers and sellers on the wholesale market.Most of Russia’s generating assets are concentrated in five thermal Wholesale Generating Companies (WGCs), the Federal Wholesale Hydro Generating Company (JSC RusHy-dro), 14 Territorial Generating Companies (TGCs) and the State Concern Rosenergoatom. The top industry companies also include JSC Inter RAO UES, an export and import en-ergy operator owning a range of generating assets, both in Russia and abroad. The State-owned Federal Grid Company (JSC FGC) op-erates the main high-voltage transmission lines. State-owned shares of Inter-regional Distribution Grid Companies (IDGCs) were transferred to JSC IDGC Holding. The system operator (JSC SO UES) performs operational dispatch con-trol within the Russian Unified Energy System.The wholesale electricity and capacity market operates in regions incorporated in the price zone. The first price
zone covers the territory of European Russia and the Urals, whereas the second zone encompasses Siberia. In non-price zones (including: Arkhangelsk and the Kaliningrad Region, the Komi Republic and Russia’s Far East), where technological reasons make it impossible (at the moment) to organize market relationships in the power sector, elec-tricity and capacity are sold on the wholesale market via regulated tariffs.Full liberalization of the wholesale and retail electricity and capacity market, which began in January 2007, was com-pleted January 1st, 2011. The 2011 structure of the whole-sale market was as follows:
Starting January 1st, 2011, power is delivered to the whole-sale electricity (capacity) market at free (non-regulated) prices, with the exception of power delivery in areas which are not part of wholesale market price zones, in isolated territorial power systems, including the constituent territo-ries of the Russian Federation, combined in a price zones of the wholesale market within the boundaries of which the equilibrium price is not formed. In addition, the prices for electricity delivered to the population and equivalent cate-
Regulated contracts (RC) forresidential delivery volume
Day-ahead market (DAM)
Non-regulated bilateral contracts (NC)
Balancing market (BM)
ELECTRICITY
Regulated contracts (RC) for residential delivery volume
Capacity supply contracts (CSC)
New HPPs / NPPs contracts
Contracts for the sale of capacity with generating facilities
delivering capacity in a forced regime (FR)
Free bilateral electricity and capacity supply contracts
(FECC)
Competitive capacity selection(CCS)
2011 Wholesale Electricity and Capacity
Market (WECM) 2011
CAPACITY
Source: http://www.sesb.ru/opt/
ТPPs
NPPs
HPPs
.
17%
15%68%
Source: SO UES
STRUCTURE OF ELECTRIC ENERGY PRODUCTION IN THE UES OF RUSSIA
According to JSC “SO UES,” in 2011, consumer demand for energy in UES of Russia increased 1.1% to 1,009.07 kWh and production growth was 1.5% – up to1,019.40 bln kWh. Approximately 68% of total electric power was produced by TPPs, 17% by NPPs and 15% by HPPs:
37
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
The operation and development of Russia’s electrical grid are the responsibility of the operator of the Unified National (All-Russian) Electrical Grid (UNEG), JSC FGC UES, operat-ing the 110-1150 kV high-voltage transmission networks, and JSC IDGC Holding, operating 0.4 – 220 kV distribution networks and territorial network organizations (TNO), pro-viding electric power transmission and distribution services via the usage of other transmission facilities than those of the UNEG.
DAM price dynamicsThe day-ahead market (DAM) is a competitive selection of price bids from suppliers and buyers for the day before ac-tual electric power delivery; prices and delivery volumes are defined for every hour of the day, as conducted by com-mercial operator JSC ATS.DAM prices have relatively high volatility due to, firstly, cyclical fluctuations (daily, weekly and annually), and sec-ondly, due to price fluctuations caused by unpredictable de-mand- or supply-side changes.According to the NP Market Council, the average weighted index of equilibrium prices for electric power during 2011 in the European part of Russia and the Urals rose 12.3% compared to 2010 and reached 989.1 rub./MWh. In Siberia, the average weighted index of equilibrium prices during the past year rose 11.4% – to 566.8 rub./MWh.
gories of consumers, as well as to customers in certain fed-eral subjects of the Russian Federation of price zones in the territory of which the Government of the Russian Federation establishes special conditions of operation of the wholesale electricity and capacity market (in the North Caucasus, Re-publics of Tuva and Buryatia) are subject to regulation.Electric power volumes not covered by regulated contracts are sold at non-regulated prices under free bilateral con-tracts (FC), on the day-ahead market (DAM) and on the balancing market (BM).Capacity volumes not covered by regulated contracts are sold under free electricity and capacity supply contracts (FECCs), including the commodity market and contracts for capacity sales as the result of competitive capacity selec-tion (CCS) conducted by the system operator. In addition, the long-term capacity market includes: capacity provision agreements (CPAs), which allow for financing new power generation investment.In December 2010, the first campaign to sign capacity pro-vision agreements (CPAs) ended. The thermal generating facility, commissioned under a capacity provision agree-ment, guarantees capacity payments for 10 years (20 years for contracts similar to CPAs signed with NPPs and HPPs), which provide returns on CAPEX and operating expenses as specified.Capacity supply contracts were signed with heat power in-dustry generating companies, spun-off from RAO UES of Russia. The list includes constructing energy facilities with a total capacity of 28 GW to 2015. Most new facilities will be located in the European part of Russia, the Urals and Siberia.A total of 6,840 CPAs were signed with generating compa-nies of the heat power industry and 3,616 CPAs were signed with HPPs/NPPs. Capacity supply contracts, similar to CPAs, were signed with JSC RusHydro and JSC Concern Rosener-goatom. As part of the CPA, JSC RusHydro will implement the following projects: the Gotsatlinskaya HPP, the Zagors-kaya PSPP-2, the Zaramagskih HPP, the Zelenchukskaya HPP-PSPP and the Kashkhatau HPP, with a total capacity of slightly less than 1.5 GW.Commissioning new facilities will eliminate the problem of lack of production capacities in experiencing shortages of electricity zones, as well as increase sectoral efficiency as a whole.
Grid infrastructureThe two principal types of activity conducted by grid or-ganizations are: the transmission of electrical power over electrical grids and the technological connection of power receivers for electricity consumers, the power plants of generating companies and the transmission facilities of other owners to the electric grid. These activities are both natural monopolies and are thus regulated by the State.
38
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
a significant decline compared to the stock market as a whole. One of the hardest-hit segments in the electric pow-er industry was the distribution sector; the sector which the regulator blamed for high electricity tariff growth rates.
2012 consumption and price forecastIn 2011, adjustments made to earlier decisions to ensure a moderate increase in prices and tariffs on goods (ser-vices) for natural monopolies, namely the shift in indexing growth in regulated prices and pipeline rates and regulated tariffs for natural monopoly activities in the electric power industry at mid-year (July), will prevent a hike in electricity prices in early 2012.According to the 2012-2014 socio-economic development forecast:• Electricity prices for all consumers, except for the general
population, will rise 6.5-7.5% on average per annum in 2012 and in 2013-2014 9-11% annually;
• The 2012-2014 indexation of regulated electricity tariffs for the population will be in July. As a result, from July 1st, 2012, tariffs will grow 6%, from July 1st, 2013 – by 8-9%, from July 1st, 2014 – by 10-12%;
• The indexation of regulated tariffs for grid organizations will also be in July: from July 1st, 2012 – by 11%, from July 1st, 2013 – 2014 – by 9-10% annually;
• Regulated tariffs for natural gas will increase 15% on July 1st each year.
In non-price zones of the wholesale electricity market and isolated territorial electric power systems, tariff growth due to an increase in fuel (coal) costs and other factors can be from January 1st, 2012.
In 2011, the growth in electric power prices can primarily be attributed to the completion of price liberalization in the industry and increased fuel costs.
2011 regulatory activity and its impact on the industry stockIn early 2011, after electricity and capacity market liberali-zation, as well as the transition of network organizations to the new tariff regulation mechanisms, there was a signifi-cant electricity price hike. As a result, the incremental price in January and February was 17%, exceeding parameters defined by the 2011 forecast.To limit the growth of regulated tariffs in the infrastructure sector (in terms of the monopoly component) and free pric-es on the liberalized market, the Government of the Rus-sian Federation adopted a package of measures that sig-nificantly changed the sector regulation and tariff forecast system. In particular, the Russian forecast for 2012-2014 socio-economic development, approved by the Govern-ment, intended using the following mechanisms:• Rejecting the indexation of free prices for capacity and
regulated prices (tariffs) for wholesale market suppliers (for delivery to the population, “forced”);
• Establishing the overall price level for competitive capacity selection in FPTZ Siberia;
• Eliminating the investment component of NPP/HPP;• Changing the methodology of RAB- regulation RAB-tariff
for FGC and IDGC from July 1st, 2012.
Meanwhile, revising the sector regulation system and tar-iffs put pressure on the electric power sector index MICEX – MicexPWR, which at the end of 2011 decreased 40.2%,
1450
1250
1050
850
650
450
250
989881
01.0
1.10
01.0
2.10
01.0
3.10
01.0
4.10
01.0
5.10
01.0
6.10
01.0
7.10
01.0
8.10
01.0
9.10
01.1
0.10
01.1
1.10
01.1
2.10
01.0
1.11
01.0
2.11
01.0
3.11
01.0
4.11
01.0
5.11
01.0
6.11
01.0
7.11
01.0
8.11
01.0
9.11
01.1
0.11
01.1
1.11
01.1
2.11
1450
1250
1050
850
650
450
250
567509
01.0
1.10
01.0
2.10
01.0
3.10
01.0
4.10
01.0
5.10
01.0
6.10
01.0
7.10
01.0
8.10
01.0
9.10
01.1
0.10
01.1
1.10
01.1
2.10
01.0
1.11
01.0
2.11
01.0
3.11
01.0
4.11
01.0
5.11
01.0
6.11
01.0
7.11
01.0
8.11
01.0
9.11
01.1
0.11
01.1
1.11
01.1
2.11
THE INDEX OF THE EQUILIBRIUM PRICE FOR THE PURCHASE OF ELECTRIC POWER IN THE 1-ST PZ, RUBLES
THE INDEX OF THE EQUILIBRIUM PRICE FOR THE PURCHASE OF ELECTRIC POWER IN THE 2-ND PZ, RUBLES
39
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
As for consumption, according to changes approved by the FTS to the consolidated balance forecast of electricity ener-gy (capacity) production and supply within the Russian Uni-fied Energy System to constituent Russian entities for 2012,
Peer groupThere are numerous power companies globally which rely on hydro-power plants for the majority of their capacity and which are owned by the State.
Company Summary Installed ca-pacity, MW
Eletrobras (Brazil) The largest power company in Brazil and Latin America, as a whole. Its assets include: numerous major HPPs, including Itaipu, the world’s largest hydro-power plant on the Parana River. The Company is controlled by the State, which owns 52% of its shares.
35,591
Hydro-Québec (Canada) Canada’s largest power company, which played a cru-cial role in the economic development of the Province of Quebec. The Company’s assets include numerous HPPs, such as major cascades on the Manicouagan River and the La Grande River. The Company is owned by the government of the Province of Quebec.
34,490
China Yangtze Power (China) The Company has only two HPPs. The Three Gorges Dam is the world’s largest hydro-power plant with a project capacity of 22.4 GW, and the downriver Gezhou-ba Dam has a capacity of 3.1 GW. The Company is con-trolled by the State.
23,415
United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) (USA)
While not a power company, it is a government agency focused on building and operating HPPs (electricity re-tail is the responsibility of other government agencies)
20,714
Edelca (Venezuela) The Company’s main asset is the world’s third largest HPP – the Guri Dam – on the Caroni River, with a ca-pacity of 10.2 GW. The Company supplies most of Ven-ezuela’s electricity and is wholly owned by the State.
15,667
US Bureau of Reclamation While not a power company, it is a government agency that operates numerous HPPs, including the famous Hoover Dam
14,502
Statkraft (Norway) The largest electricity producer in Norway and the third largest in Scandinavia. The Company owns approxi-mately 150 HPPs, with lots of them having long-term storage reservoirs. The Company is wholly owned by the State.
12,969
BC Hydro (Canada) The largest electricity producer in the Province of Brit-ish Columbia. The Company owns 30 HPPs and is con-trolled by the provincial government.
n/a
in 2012, Russian electricity consumption will be 1,049.1 bln kWh. Thus, taking into account adjustments, in 2012, fore-cast growth in electricity consumption will be approximately 3% compared to actual consumption in 2011.
40
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
generating companies (OGKs), fourteen territorial generat-ing companies (TGKs) and the State-run Rosenergoatom (a nuclear power producer). Other large companies operating in the industry include Inter RAO UES, which is a Russian electricity exporter and importer that owns numerous gen-erating assets in Russia and abroad.
KEY COMPETITORS AND COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGESWith the exception of RusHydro – the Federal Hydro-Gener-ating Company of the Wholesale Market – most of Russia’s generating assets belong to the six thermal power generat-ing companies on the wholesale electricity market territorial
INSTALLED CAPACITY OF THE LARGEST GLOBAL PEERS, MW
Parent company Generators
Gazprom Energoholding • TGK-1
• TGK -3
• OGK-2(merged with OGK-6)
• OGK-6 (merged with OGK-2)
Rosenergoatom • Rosenergoatom
En+ Group • Irkutskenergo
• The Krasnoyarskaya HPP
IES Holding • TGK-5
• TGK -6
• TGK -7
• TGK -9
INTER RAO UES • INTER RAO UES
• OGK-1
• OGK -3
• TGK-11
E.ON • OGK-4
Enel • OGK -5
SUEK • Kuzbassenergo (TGK-12)
• TGK-13
0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 35,000
35,59134,490
23,41520,714
15,66714,502
12,969
Eletrobras (Brazil)
Hydro-Québec (Canada)
China Yangtze Power (China)
United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) (USA)
Edelca (Venezuela)
US Bureau of Reclamation
Statkraft (Norway)
41
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
FJSC Sistema • Bashkirenergo
LUKOIL • LUKOIL (TGK-8)
UMMC • Novosibirskenergo
Sintez Group • TGK-2
Onexim • Quadra (TGK-4)
Fortum • Fortum (TGK-10)
ESN Group/Russian Railways • TGK-14
THE COMPANY’S KEY COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES
ENVIRONMENTALLYFRIENDLY
Hydro resources represent a renewable energy source that is the
most environmentally friendly, allowing for decreased air emissions from thermal and electricity power
plants, while preserving hydro-carbon fuel reserves
HIGHLY FLEXIBLE
HPPs offer the greatest degree of flexibility, capable of sharply
increasing output within minutes to cover peak loads
NO FUEL COMPONENT IN COGS
Immunity to energy price volatility, logically offers long-term price
guarantees to consumers
Company’s share has remained stable during the last three years, both by energy generation performance and by the share of total installed capacity across the Russian Federation.
* Source: SO UES
THE COMPANY’S SHARE IN THE MARKET SEGMENT AND PERFORMANCE OVER THE PAST THREE YEARS
Year Electricity Capacity
Consumption in Russia, million kWh
Company output, million kWh
Share Installed capacity of Russian power plants, MW
Total installed capacity of the Company’s power plants, MW
Share
2009 942,825 81,607 8.7% 211,846 25,402 12.0%
2010 988,961 72,002 7.3% 214,869 25,506 11.9%
2011 1,021,100 77,052 7.5% 218,146 26,116 12.0%
42
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
TARIFF REGULATIONUnder statutory legal requirements, all plants with installed capacity exceeding 25 MW can sell electricity only on the wholesale energy market (WEM). A majority of the Com-pany’s power plants are WEM operators. Power plants with capacity ranging from 5 MW to 25 MW are entitled to op-erate both on the wholesale and retail electricity and ca-
pacity markets. Corporate plants in this category sell their electricity and capacity on the WEM. Given that plants with capacity less than 5 MW and operating in the retail market are not regulated by the State and can sell electricity and capacity at unregulated prices, the table below provides a tariff scheme for HPPs operating on the WEM.
Electricity and capacity are sold in accordance with tariffs under regulated agreements (RAs). The total value of the RAs may not exceed 35% of the full energy and capacity supply volume to the wholesale market as set forth in the balance sheet decision for the relevant producer.
In Prize Zone 2, capacity traded on a competitive basis is also sold under tariffs equal to RA tariffs.
In Prize Zone 2, capacity traded on a competitive basis is also sold under tariffs equal to RA tariffs.Tariffs for plants that are WEM market players are estab-lished by the Russian Tariffs Service (RTS), in accordance with proprietary guidelines:• The main tariff calculation methodology for existing
plants (including those located in the non-price zone) is the indexation methodology: the base calculated in 2007 is reviewed annually so that it can increase in line with the consumer price index (as published by
the Russian Ministry of Economic Development). The above-mentioned method is also applied to new plants starting from their second year of operation (for facilities covered by commissioning agreements, it applies to electricity only);
• For the first year of a plant’s WEM operation, the tariff is based on the economically justified expenditure method, which helps identify the economically justified amount of financing that a company needs to carry out regulated operations during a specified time period.
New plants Existing plants
Facilities covered by commissioning agreements
HPPs not covered by commissioning agreements
Price Zone 1 Price Zone 2 Non-price Zone
electricity RA tariff tariff tariff tariff
Four-lateral agreements
tariff
DAM Unregulated WEM sector
Non-regulated bilateral power and capacity contracts
Non-regulated bilateral agreements
WEM
capacity RA tariff tariff tariff
Four-lateral agreements
tariff
Capacity traded on a competitive basis
WEM WEM tariff
DAM WEM
Non-regulated bilateral power and capacity contracts
WEM WEM WEM
43
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
In contrast to prior regulatory periods, the tariffs described above do not include the profit-funded investment compo-nent. From 2011 to 2012, the capacity price, based on the results of competitive trading, will be increased by a rate determined by the Russian Federal Tariffs Service, under ap-proved guidelines that ensure the funding needed to con-struct (rebuild or upgrade) HPPs (PSHPPs). For facilities covered by commissioning agreements, the capacity price is also calculated by the Federal Tariffs Service under approved guidelines.The Russian Federal Law “On the Electric Power Industry” sets forth a legislative framework and government regulation methods, as well as the scope of power for regulatory bodies in the electric power industry.The procedure for calculating and setting electricity and ca-pacity tariffs and timelines are set by the Rules of Govern-ment Regulation and the Application of Tariffs on Electric and Heat Energy in the Russian Federation.
As of January 1st, 2012, the Company had total installed capacity of 26.1 MW (including JSC Geotherm, JSC Kolymenergo and the Pauzhetskaya GeoPP).
THE COMPANY’S INSTALLED CAPACITY, MW
PRODUCTION PERFORMANCEIn 2011, RusHydro’s totaled installed capacity grew 48.5 MW, driven by:• The launch of the Egorlykskaya HPP-2 at the Cascade of
Kubanskiye HPPs – 14.2 MW;• capacity increase throungh re-labeling:
- at the Cascade of Verkhnevolzhskiye HPPs – 10.0 MW; - at the Volzhskaya HPP – 10.0 MW; - at the Zhigulevskaya HPP – 10.5 MW;
• Mergers: - Small HPPs with a total capacity of 3.8 MW (1 MW Amsarskaya HPP, 1.4 MW Shinzanskaya HPP, 1.4 MW Arakulskaya HPP) with the Dagestan branch in December 2011.
0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000
160.6400455466.6476.6520522561.4
9001,020
1,2001,3301,3601,3701,385.7
2,0102,341
2,592.56,721
155.591.96214.1The Pauzhetskaya GeoPP
JSC Geotherm The Northern Ossetian Branch
The Kabardino-Balkarian Branch The Karachaevo-Cherkessian Branch
The Irganayskaya HPP The Novosibirskaya HPP
The Cascade of Verkhnevolzhskiye HPPs The Cascade of Kubanskiye HPPs
The Nizhegorodskaya HPP The Kamskaya HPP
JSC MEC JSC Kolymaenergo (the Kolymskaya HPP)
The Votkinskaya HPP The Zagorskaya PSHPP
The Zeyskaya HPP The Saratovskaya HPP
The Cheboksarskaya HPP The Dagestan Branch The Bureyskaya HPP
The Zhigulevskaya HPP The Volzhskaya HPP
The Neporozhniy Sayano-Shushensky Branch
44
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
The 6.2% increase in RusHydro’s electricity output in 2011, year-on-year, is due to equipment launches at the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP following the accident in August 2009, as well as equipment launches at the Irganayskaya HPP following the September 2010 incident.Actual electricity output totaled 99.3% of the Company’s 2011 target, which can be attributed to the hydrological situation in the region of the Volzhsko-Kamsky Cascade of HPPs.
The Company remains committed to successfully devel-oping retail electricity sales as a critical new business. As part of the Company’s energy sales strategy, the Company acquired an interest in numerous energy sales companies during the reporting year to capitalize on the potential of retail electricity markets, synergies from electricity genera-tion and sales and energy services, along with the Com-pany’s access to final consumers.
In 2011, the principal revenue growth drivers included:• Increased actual electricity output;• Increased electricity sales on the day-ahead market at
unregulated prices, in accordance with the liberalization schedule for the wholesale electricity and capacity market;
• Higher unregulated electricity prices on the day-ahead market.
The Company’s electricity and capacity purchases fell RUR 5,626 million and totaled RUR 9,150 million in 2011. In 2011, the principal reasons for the lower costs of energy purchases were:• A reduction in electricity sales under regulated
agreements, in accordance with the liberalization schedule for the wholesale electricity and capacity markets, along with increased electricity output, has caused a decline in the amount and cost of electricity bought to cover regulated agreements on the day-ahead market when HPP production is insufficient to meet the schedule of electricity supplies under regulated agreements;
• The absence of non-regulated bilateral agreements to purchase electricity in 2011, which were signed in 2010; this was due to changes in numerous rules and regulations for the wholesale electricity and capacity markets;
2010
2011
66,000 68,000 70,000 72,000 74,000 76,000 78,000
72,00270,682
77,75275,732
Generation
Output
POWER GENERATION AND OUTPUT DYNAMICS, MILLION KWH
• A reduction in the cost of purchased capacity in 2011 versus 2010, due to a decline in the amount of capacity purchased by the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP.
Principal efforts to boost energy sales efficiency included:• Signing a Service Agreement for reactive power
regulation without electricity output in July 2011. In addition to reimbursing maintenance expenses due to RusHydro’s equipment being used to provide services under the Agreement, it helped compensate for the price of capacity purchased on the WEM (during the Agreement term);
• Signing non-regulated bilateral power and capacity contracts in both WEM price and non-price zones to boost electricity and capacity sales margins.
In 2011, the Company also initiated approving the follow-ing changes, taking into account hydro-power generation specifics:• Taking into account performance specifics of counter-
regulating power plants when involved in the automated secondary regulation of active capacity frequency and cross-flows (counter-regulating HPPs, i.e. low and medium-head hydro-power plants with an installed capacity of more than 200 MW with short-term storage reservoirs to redistribute varying water flows from the
45
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
ENERGY EFFICIENCY Energy efficiency tops the agenda for companies and regu-lators in most developed economies. Taking into account its power generation specifics, RusHydro adheres to an ap-proach based on both efficiency and modernization.In 2010, RusHydro’s Management Board approved the 2010-2015 Program on energy conservation and upgrad-ing energy efficiency, which sets forth three key areas that define energy efficiency measures across the entire Group and all business segments:• Energy efficiency improvements at existing HPPs;• Optimization of water resource utilization;• Reduction in energy consumption to meet the Company’s
own needs
Given its type of power generation, energy consumption for its own needs is a non-significant indicator of the Compa-ny’s own energy efficiency improvement efforts. HPP con-sumption is to a large extent shaped by water supply and modes of generation, as established by the system opera-
tor. As a result, electricity output growth was chosen as the key indicator for the 2010-2015 Program on Energy Saving and Upgrading Energy Efficiency at RusHydro.As part of upgrading the energy efficiency management system, in 2011, the Company developed the corporate standard “Energy Efficiency and Energy Saving – Norms and Requirements” for its HPPs and PSHPPs.For 2011 to 2020, RusHydro’s energy efficiency target is to increase electricity output to 3.3 billion kWh (4.04%).Efforts aimed at upgrading the capacity and efficiency of hydro-power units and reducing electricity losses at power transformers brought the Company 89 million kWh growth in long-term average output per year. In value terms, the effect exceeded RUR 90 million.Progress to date has been the result of synergies from the technical rehabilitation and modernization program (tech-nological loss reduction by replacing turbines and units, up-grading the quality and volume of repairs and installing the latest energy-saving equipment and devices).
upstream power plants to its steady tail water flows to enable the upstream high-head regulating hydro-power plant with an installed capacity in excess of 1,000 MW to cover daily and/or weekly power load irregularities, are excluded from the automated secondary regulation of frequency and cross-flows of active capacity);
• Clarifications on the procedure for reporting the water tax rate to JSC ATS and JSC ATS’ procedure description if the supplier fails to provide said data;
• Clarifications on the calculation procedure for the amount of electricity that can be sold by electricity suppliers under bilateral agreements in non-price zones, enabling suppliers to sell the largest possible amount of electricity (“overbalance”) under bilateral agreements if they exceed the amount of electricity included in the supplier’s balance forecast for the respective month;
• Clarifications on the procedure for providing investment program details (title list of construction in progress) with the capex target for building generating capacity to calculate the price of capacity supplied under sale and purchase agreements, for capacity of new HPPs (including PSHPPs).
KEY RESULTS OF ENERGY EFFICIENCY EFFORTS
Commission capacity under the upgrad-ing and renovation program
Long-term average output growth*
Fuel economy* Reduction in СО2 air emis-sions*
MW million kWh/year thousand tons of equiv-alent fuel per year
thousand tons per year
25.5 88.588 22.946 44.582
*Effects from these efforts will be fully realized in 2012. Efforts are carried out across the following facilities: the Volzhskaya HPP, the Zhigulevskaya HPP, the Kamskaya HPP, the Cascade of Verkhnevolzhskiye HPPs, the Cheboksarskaya HPP, the Saratovskaya HPP, the Cascade of Kubanskiye HPPsSource: RusHydro
46
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
branches and units of JSC RusHydro’s energy supply com-panies and 18 energy audits of external customers.The Company continued to develop its Energy Saving and Energy Efficiency Centers established by energy supply subsidiaries of JSC RusHydro in Krasnoyarsk, Novochebok-sarsk and Ryazan. During the years, the Centers were vis-ited by 15,000 people and held over 120 tours for students and 83 seminars for specialists.In order to implement its pilot energy service contracts, JSC Energy Supply Company RusHydro is constructing a block modular boiler station in Pribelskaya village of Karmaksa-linsky district, Bashkortostan. The facility is scheduled for commissioning in H1 2012.More details about the Company’s energy efficiency policy are available in the 2011 Corporate Sustainability and So-cial Responsibility Report.
Businesses that do not have heavy energy consumption (e.g. design and engineering companies) are predominantly switching from incandescent lamps to energy efficient ones. These companies are also introducing automated control systems to monitor lighting and heating, etc.To increase energy efficiency and energy saving for energy consumers (energy sales performance development) the energy supply subsidiaries of JSC RusHydro are making the following efforts:• carry out energy surveys of energy consumers and
develop their energy saving programs;• introduce the practice of energy service contracts; and• enhance awareness and hold events encouraging energy
saving and energy efficiency.
In 2011, energy audit departments of regional energy supply companies in total carried out 45 energy audits of
Energy resource type Consumption volume in kind, million kWh
Consumption volume, RUR million
Purchased energy consumption: 3,290.62,750
pumping mode 2,466.3
own need 824.3
Volume of each type of energy resource used by the Company in 2011In 2011, purchased energy accounted for the most part of energy resources used by the Company.
47
annual report / 2011
INDUSTRY REVIEW
As part of events organized by the Russian-Chinese Busi-ness Council, the Company continued establishing rela-tionships and considering cooperation opportunities with large Chinese companies that are interested in energy and hydro-power sector partnerships. RusHydro sees new op-portunities to team up with Chinese partners following the acquisition of a controlling stake in RAO ES of the East, which owns a large number of power facilities in territories bordering China.In 2011, the Company signed numerous inter-corporate memoranda and cooperation agreements with foreign com-panies: France’s Alstom and Electricite de France, the State Grid Corporation of China, Argentina’s ENARSA, Iceland’s Reykjavík Geo-thermal, Austria’s Voith Hydro, Korea’s Ko-rea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO) and Hyundai Heavy Industries Co., Ltd.Under its strategy for acquiring and building hydro-power generating assets outside Russia, the Company made its first acquisition in 2011, buying the Armenian-based Cas-cade of the Sevan-Hrazdan HPPs, which includes seven derivation hydro-power plants on the Hrazdan River. The plants have 21 hydro-units with a total installed capacity of 561 MW and an average annual output of 501 million kWh.
INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIESRusHydro is strongly focused on enhancing its international business ties, aimed at attracting foreign investments into promising new projects and sharing experience and new technologies in hydro-power and renewable energy, along with driving bilateral cooperation with foreign electricity, design and engineering companies.
The Company is a member of numerous non-profits and international bodies:• The Global Sustainable Electricity Partnership (e8);• The World Economic Forum (WEF);• The World Energy Council (WEC);• The International Hydro-power Association (IHA);• The International Commission on Large Dams (ICOLD);• The International Association for Hydro-Environment
Engineering and Research (IAHR).
In 2011, RusHydro was involved in a number of inter- governmantal integration associations, including: the CIS Electric Energy Council and the Eurasian Economic Com-munity (EAEC). In conjunction with the Executive Council of the CIS Electric Energy Council and the Hydro-project Association, the Company organized and managed an inter-national youth R&D conference “Innovations in the Power Sector.” RusHydro also helped organize and manage the 40th anniversary meeting of the CIS Electric Energy Council, with the participation of heads of national energy ministries and local companies from the CIS.
2 0 1 12 0 1 1
an
nu
al
rep
ort
2 0 1 1
RusHydro3.1
3.2
3.3
INVESTMENT
INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL RESULTS
50
annual report / 2011
INVESTMENT
2011 INVESTMENT PROGRAMThe Company’s 2011 investment program was approved by the Russian Ministry of Energy (16.09.2010) №447 and RusHydro’s Board of Directors (15.10.2010, Minutes №109); and adjusted funding sources for the investment program were approved by Order No. 204 by the Ministry of Energy on May 31, 2011.The 2011 investment program of JSC RAO ES of the East was approved by Order No. 477 of the Ministry of Energy on October 4, 2010; and adjusted funding sources for the investment program were approved by Order No. 653 by the Ministry of Energy on December 30, 2011. The investment program of JSC Sakhalinenergo was ap-proved by Order No. 386 of the Ministry of Energy on Au-gust 13, 2010.The investment program of JSC Kamchatskenergo was ap-proved by Order No. 386 of the Ministry of Energy on Au-gust 13, 2010; and the adjusted investment program was approved by Order No. 368 of the Ministry of Energy on August 22, 2011.The investment programs of JSCs Magadanenergo and AC Yakutskenergo were approved by the Order of the Ministry of Energy on August 13, 2010; and the adjusted investment program was approved by Order No. 370 of the Ministry of Energy on August 22, 2011.The investment programs of JSCs DRSK, Chukotenergo and UESC were approved by the executive bodies of the Russian Federation.Thus, the approved 2011 investment volume for RusHydro was 134,151.3 million rubles, including:• JSC RusHydro – 108,845.0 million rubles;• Holding JSC RAO ES of the East – 25,306.3 million rubles.
For the fiscal year, expenditures on executing the invest-ment program were 115,541.3 million rubles, which ac-counted for 86.13% of the planned investment volume:• JSC RusHydro – 94,819.9 million rubles;• Holding JSC RAO ES of the East – 20,721.9 million rubles.
The main reasons for the deviations from the investment program of JSC RusHydro:• For Modernization and Reconstruction (MR) projects –
the upward deviation from planned values associated with beginning a series of projects on the comprehensive modernization of hydro-power equipment;
• For the project «Restoration of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP» – a decrease in funding due to refining the annual funding based on tendering procedures, as well as a cost update for reconstructing the 500 kV outdoor switchgear and the delivery of power generation transformers;
• For the project «The Boguchansk Aluminium Smelter», reduction in funding results from poor organization of work by companies supervised by UC Rusal (JSC Construction Developer BoAZ);
INVESTMENTINVESTMENT POLICY PRINCIPLESThe Company’s investment policy and adoption of decisions related to it are based on the following principles:• Investment decisions and the project’s compliance with
legislatively established requirements, building codes and environmental standards;
• Following the sequence of steps and stages for investment project implementation;
• Investment decisions and the project’s compliance with requirements on profitability and risk, established by the Company’s Board of Directors;
• Analysis of costs and benefits for alternative investment decisions at the end of each investment project stage when basic parameters change;
• Funding sources available for all investment projects.
The Company’s investment activity is regulated by a single consolidated document – the Regulations on the Invest-ment Management Process in the Form of Capital Invest-ments (approved November 30th, 2010). Approval of the Company’s investment program is the responsibility for the Company’s Board of Directors. At the same time, in accordance with the Procedure for Formulating, Agreeing on and Approving Investment Programs for Electric Power Engineering Entities as a Government-linked Company, the investment programs, before being approved by JSC RusHydro’s Board of Directors, are agreed upon with ex-ecutive authorities and approved by the Russian Ministry of Energy (in accordance with Government Decree No. 977 of December 1, 2009 on Investment Programs of Energy Industry Constituents (as amended and restated on De-cember 29, 2011)).
51
annual report / 2011
INVESTMENT
The Holding JSC RAO ES of the East – 3.78 MW (planned volume – 3.97 MW), including:• upgrading DPPs in Dolinovka and Ossora villages and
Palana village on total 1.7 MW (JSC UESC); • construction of reserve DPP in Vitim village and supply
of AD-60 gas generator to Yuren village of total 1.57 MW (JSC Yakutskenergo);
• construction of distribution grids and substations to supply energy to mobile radiotelephone communications facilities of the federal highway Amur Chita-Khabarovsk of total 0.51 MW (JSC RAO ES of the East).
JSC RAO ES of the East electric grids:• Grid capacity: planned length of 1,421.87 km; actually
1,569.0 km; performance – 110%;• Transformer capacity: planned 542.97 MVA, actually
731.75 MVA, performance – 135%.
In 2011, the main areas of investment were:• Modernization and reconstruction (MR) – 50 billion rubles.
(JSC RusHydro – 34.1 billion rubles, JSC RAO ES of the East – 15.9 billion rubles);
• Facilities under construction – 47.7 billion rubles (JSC RusHydro – 44.0 billion rubles, JSC RAO ES of the East – 3.7 billion rubles);
• Restoration of SSH HPP and BHPP – 8.3 billion rubles;• Facilities under design – 6.9 billion rubles;• RES projects – 1.3 billion rubles;• Other projects – 1.1 billion rubles (JSC RusHydro:
completion of SSH HPP, interest repayment on credit facilities allocated for financing the Kashkhatau HPP in 2010 – 0.1 billion rubles; and JSC RAO ES of the East: fixed assets acquisition, repayment of investment loans and interest on credit facilities – 1.0 billion rubles).
In 2011, the plan for commissioning capacities was fulfilled at 130%. In 2011, 25.5 MW of capacity was commissioned (from a planned volume of 18.5 MW), including:The Zhigulevsk HPP – 10.5 MW;The Uglich HPP – 10 MW;The Volzhsk HPP – 5 MW.
• In the course of the Russian Ministry of Energy harmonizing the Company’s 2011 adjusted investment program and the 2012-2014 investment program, a decision was made to stop implementing the “Far Eastern Wind Power Plant” and the “Chibit Small HPP” projects. As a result, in 2011, financing on these projects was suspended;
• In the absence of a decision by State bodies on the construction of the Cancun HPP and the implementation of measures to bank up the water level at the Cheboksary Reservoir, in 2011, only project design work was financed.
The main reasons for deviations from the investment pro-gram of JSC RAO ES of the East: • delays in tendering procedure dates on the priority
projects of JSC RAO ES of the East; • updating the required advance payments and adjustment
of payment schedules on the concluded agreements; • completion of the actual scope of work in the reporting
period with payments carried forward to the Q1 2012.
INVESTMENT DYNAMICS, BILLION RUBLES
2011
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
2010
* JSC RAO ES of the East
20.7*99.2
115.5
2009 54.3
2008 54.6
2007 56.1
52
annual report / 2011
INVESTMENT
Major investment projects
2011 INVESTMENT STRUCTURE
TMR
Facilities under construction
Restoration of SSH HPP and BHPP
Facilities under design
RES projects
Other projects
.7%6%1%1%
41%
43%
JSC RusHydro: JSC RAO ES of the East
Restoration of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP, 6,400 MW (addressing the results of the August 17th, 2009 accident and restoring the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP, renovation of the hydropower units with the full replacement of hydrogenation, hyrdoturbine and power equipment, automation and operation systems, alarm systems, safety communications system, protection and devices). As of January 1st, 2012, four restored hydro-power units are being successfully operated. On December 19th, 2011, the first fully reconstructed hydro-power unit (number 1) was put into operation
Construction and renovation of energy grid facilities by APEC-2012 summit in Vladivostok (JSC DRSK)
Construction of the coastal spillway of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP (construction of additional spillway to enhance reliability of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP). Construction was completed and the facility was put into operation
Convert the Vladivostok HES-1, HES-2 and TS Severnaya to natural gas combustion. (JSC DRSK)
Full reconstruction of the Baksanskaya HPP (complete replacement of the existing and damaged equipment after the 2010 incident). Work is carried out in accordance with an approved schedule. The target commissioning date – June 30th, 2012
Convert the Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk HES-1 to natural gas combustion (JSC Sakhalinenergo)
The 570 MW Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP (ensure energy supply to the Magadan region consumers and partially to consumers in the Oymyakon district of the Sakha Republic, supply reasonably priced energy to new gold and precious metal mining companies). On September 25th, 2011, the Kolyma River was dammed. Work is underway to ensure the launch of the first two hydro-power units with temporary Pelton wheels in 2013
Convert the Kamchatka HES-1 to natural gas combustion. (JSC Kamchatskenergo)
53
annual report / 2011
INVESTMENT
JSC RusHydro: JSC RAO ES of the East
The 2,997 MW Boguchanskaya HPP (the HPP completion has a critical importance for the development of Nizhny Priangarsk and Siberian economic regions. Half of energy generated by HPP is planned to supply to the aluminum plant under construction.) In 2011, filling the foundation pit of the downstream channel, assembling the main electrical equipment of the GIS 500 kV, closing sluice ports of section 24 and section 28 and installing hydro-power units No.5 and No.6 were started
TPP construction in Sovetskaya Gavan (meet the energy consumption growth outlook in the Sovetsko-Gavansky district related to the creation of a new port economic zone) of 120 MW electric power and 200 Gcal/h thermal capacity. The project is implemented under the Agreement between JSC RAO ES of the East and the Khabarovsk Region Administration
The 100 MW Gotsatlinskaya HPP (energy and capacity supply to the deficient North Caucasus UES; performing the assignment of Chairman of the Russian Government to make efforts to remedy the social and political situation in and improve the social status of Dagestan.)
GTP-TPPs construction at Vladivostok TPP-2 site (meet a growing demand for energy in the Primorsky energy system and cover estimated capacity shortage) of 232.4 MW electric capacity and 200 Gcal/h thermal capacity. The project is implemented under the Agreement between JSC RAO ES of the East and the Primorsk Region Administration
The 352 MW Zaramagskiye HPPs (remedy energy shortages in the Republic of North Ossetia)
1st phase construction of Yakutsk DHPP-2 (replace disabled facilities of the Yakutsk DHPP and meet the anticipated demand for energy in the Central Energy District of Yakutsk energy system) of 170 MW electric capacity and 160 Gcal/h thermal capacity
The 840 MW Zagorskaya PSHPP (streamline the irregular daily load schedule and regulate energy regimes)
2nd phase construction of the Blagoveshenskaya TPP (liquidate the existing and estimated shortage of thermal power) of 110 MW electric capacity and 175 Gcal/h thermal capacity
Small HPPs (commission new generating units based on RES; enhance a sustainable energy supply to the mountain regions of the North Caucasus)
Construction of the 5th energy unit at Yuzhno-Sakhalinskaya TPP-1 (cover the capacity shortage within the Sakhalin regional energy system and enhance energy supply reliability) of 370 MW electric capacity and 560 Gcal/h thermal capacity
The 2010 MW Bureyskaya HPP and the 320 MW Nizhne-Bureyskaya HPP (for industrial energy supply to the Amur Region, Khabarovsk and Primorsky Districts and preventing winter floods in villages located in the lower pool of the Buryeyskaya HPP, protection of the lower pool of the Nizhne-Bureyskaya HPP, including the area bordering on the Amur River.)
Construction of distribution grids and substations to supply energy to the mobile radiotelephone system at the Amur federal highway Chita-Khabarovsk (energy supply to main mobile operators at the Amur federal highway). The project has been implemented in accordance with minutes No. VP-P9-46 of the meeting held at Vladimir Putin’s office on August 30, 2010 to address the matter of providing telecommunications services along the Amur federal highway Chita-Khabarovsk
The 140 MW Zelenchukskaya HPP-PSHPP (enhance reliability of energy supply to the North Caucasus energy system and balance the daily schedule of the Kuban River.)
54
annual report / 2011
INVESTMENT
The actual value of sources used to finance the Investment Program in 2011 was RUR 115.5 billion, including:• profit – 21.4 billion rubles (JSC RusHydro – 20.3 billion
rubles; and JSC RAO ES of the East – 1.1 billion rubles);• depreciation – 17.0 billion rubles (JSC RusHydro – 9.1
billion rubles; and JSC RAO ES of the East – 7.9 billion rubles);
• other equity – 20.3 billion rubles (JSC RusHydro – 15.5 billion rubles; and JSC RAO ES of the East –4.8 billion rubles);
• loans and borrowings – 43.6 billion rubles (JSC RusHydro – 37.2 billion rubles; and JSC RAO ES of the East – 6.4 billion rubles);
• federal budget funds – 4.6 billion rubles (JSC RusHydro – 4.3 billion rubles; and JSC RAO ES of the East – 0.3 billion rubles);
• other raised funds – 8.7 billion rubles (JSC RusHydro – 8.5 billion rubles; and JSC RAO ES of the East – 0.2 billion rubles);
Funding for the investment programIn 2011, the approved amount of funding sources was 134.2 billion rubles, including:• Profit – 36.9 billion rubles;• Depreciation – 17.2 billion rubles;• Other equity – 32.4 billion rubles;• Loans – 27.6 billion rubles;• Federal budget funds – 4.5 billion rubles;• Other borrowed funds – 15.5 billion rubles.
Loans
Federal budget funds
Other borrowed funds
Profit
Depreciation
Other owners` eguity
.
15%18%4%
7%18%
38%
FINANCING SOURCE STRUCTURE
JSC RusHydro: JSC RAO ES of the East
The 12 MW Experimental Industrial Severnaya Tidal Plant (design and production of main floating TPP structures as a prototype model of high-power TPPs; building experience in hydropower design for northern off-shore regions; development of floating construction methods in the northern off-shore regions and technologies to construct a blocking subsurface dam for further construction of high-power TPPs.)
The 1,000 MW Kankunskaya HPP (power supply to the participants in the investment projects for integrated development of South Yakutia (guaranteed energy consumers.)) The design documents are planned for execution in 2012
55
annual report / 2011
INVESTMENT
Compared with 2010, in 2011, there was a decline in the share of own financing sources for the Investment Pro-gram. This is due to the fact that cash represented a sig-nificant share of own financing sources. At the beginning of 2010, this totaled 45.5 billion rubles and with maximum use of it in 2010. Also, the equity capital share declined due to reduced profit and amortization in financial sources of the JSC RAO ES of the East Investment Program and a RUR 11.5 billion decrease in the investment component in the tariff set for JSC RusHydro (in 2010, the tariff invest-ment component was 24.4 billion rubles and 12.9 billion rubles in 2011.) Therefore, in 2011, 43.6 billion rubles was fundraised to finance capital investment.
INVESTMENTS WITH EXPECTED RATE OF RETURN EXCEEDING 10% PER YEARUnder its Investment Program, the Company invests in the generation facilities where the annual rate of return on in-vestment exceeds 10%.
Boguchanskaya HPPThis power plant is under construction since 1980. The completion has a critical importance for the Nizhny Prianga-rye region and the Siberian economic region in whole. More than half of generated energy will be used at the Bogu-chansk Aluminium Smelter under construction.The total project budget value is RUR 90,793 million. The main completion financing source are loans extended by Vnesheconombank (from December 2010) and equity capi-tal of RusHydro and RUSAL. The first six hydropower units at Boguchanskaya HPP of 1,998 MW will be commissioned in 2012. Another three hydropower units of 999 MW and construction completion are planned for 2013.
Reconstruction of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP named after P.S.NeporozhniyThe Company has been implementing the project for complete renovation of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP to eliminate the consequences of the 2009 accident. As of the reporting year end, the Company has restored four hydro-power units. The full replacement of all ten hydropower units with new ones is scheduled for late 2014.The total restoration cost of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP is RUR 40,981 million. The project is financed by Company’s equity capital and by raising funds of RUR 4,832.1 million from the federal budget in 2009. The Company plans to se-cure leverage financing, if its financial sources prove to be insufficient to complete the above project.
Gotsatlinskaya HPPThe main purpose of the Gotsantlinskaya HPP construction
Zagorskaya PSHPP-2The Zagorskaya PSHPP-2 is needed to address balancing capacity shortage during the night as well as to help regu-late regime parameters: the voltage of demand manage-ment capacity during the night-time dip in the energy load and to cover peak energy loads and manage frequency and voltage.As an important controlled operating reserve for the nuclear power plant and energy system, PSHPP will raise the NPP performance. Synchronized commissioning deadlines for PSHPP and NPP power units will increase the NPP’s installed capacity factor by expanding capacity transmission via ex-isting grids of UES of Russia, reduce transfer flows between the unified energy systems and cut the fossil fuel consump-tion in energy generation across UES of Russia.Commissioning of the Zagorskaya PSHPP-2 in the Center energy system will be synchronized with the commissioning of power unit No. 4 at the Kalininskaya NPP in 2012.The total construction cost is RUR 73,255 million. Financ-ing is made from Company’s equity and the federal budg-et funds of RUR 7,586.5 million raised in 2008-2009. The Company plans to secure leverage financing, if its financial sources prove to be insufficient to complete the above pro-ject. Commissioning of the Zagorskaya PSHPP-2 is scheduled as follows: 420 MW in 2012, 210 MW in 2013, and 210 MW in 2014. The completion is planned in 2014.
Development of Renewable Energy SourceJSC RusHydro is the only Russian company that has a great potential in the use of renewable energy sources. The Com-pany has a significant number of technological develop-ments in the fields of tidal power plants, wind-driven power plants and the geo-thermal power industry.At the same time, under existing legislation, as well as in the absence of actual mechanisms of State support for creating RES facilities, as established by the Russian Federal Law № 35-FZ «On Electric Power Industry» (from 26.03.2003), RES facilities do not meet economic efficien-cy requirements. This means that as a government-linked company, JSC RusHydro cannot include these projects in its investment programs.
is to supply energy and capacity of end-users within the de-ficient energy system of the North Caucasus and follow up on Order No. MF-P11-2461 of June 1, 2006 of President of the Russian Federation to make efforts under the program to settle the political and social situation in Dagestan and improve its social status. The completion and commissioning of a 100 MW capac- ity is planned in 2013. The total cost of Gotsantlinskaya HPP construction is RUR 11,106 million. The construction is financed by Company’s equity and co-financing of RUR 4,631.4 million from the federal budget in 2011-2012.
56
annual report / 2011
INVESTMENT
In the context of the above situation, due to the need to carry out additional economic calculations and a review of economic efficiency in 2011, in accordance with comments by the Russian Ministry of Economic Development and Ener gy on the draft JSC RusHydro’s 2012-2014 investment program, the Company suspended implementation of such investment projects as the Far East WPS, the Northern TPS and geo-thermal project development in the Kamchatka region.
Comprehensive Modernization Program for Generating FacilitiesThe comprehensive modernization program (CMP) covers key areas for upgrading the main generating equipment of the Company and automating basic production processes, based on the current technical condition of key assets and forecast dynamics for the future.The program aims to upgrade the reliability and operational safety of the Company’s existing generation facilities, as well as to increase installed capacity and electricity produc-tion.In 2011, a comprehensive modernization program for 5 major JSC RusHydro plants was launched. As part of the program, the following contracts were signed:• To comprehensively modernize 21 hydro-power turbines
and hydro-power unit No. 24 at the Saratov HPP (the work will be performed through Deсember 31st, 2024);
• To manufacture and deliver equipment for hydro-power units at the Volzhskaya HPP (10 hydro-power turbines and 22 hydro-power generators) and the execution of work / service (the work will be performed through December 31st, 2021);
• To manufacture and deliver equipment for 5 hydro-power units at the Novosibirskaya HPP and the performance of work / service (the work will be performed through May 31st, 2019);
• To manufacture and deliver equipment for 14 hydro-power units at the Zhigulevskaya HPP and execution of work / service (the work will be performed through December 31st, 2016);
• To comprehensively reconstruct and modernize, the technical re-equipment of the Kuban HPPs Cascade (under the contract, the guideline for carrying out work is through September 23rd, 2021).
57
annual report / 2011
INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT
INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENTDuring the reporting year, the Company continued to pur-sue the Innovative Development Program approved by the Company’s Board of Directors in 2010.The Program’s key goals in 2011 included:• Creating infrastructure to manage the Company’s
innovative development;
• Launching innovative development projects;
• Establishing an independent evaluation system for innovative development projects;
• Developing the Company’s human resource potential as a priority;
• Launching the technological platform to pursue Prospective Technologies for Renewable Energy;
• Establishing a system to monitor and select innovative projects for the upcoming reporting period.
• Totally, the key performance indicators (KPI) for the investment development program have been met.
Key 2011 achievements:• The Company launched seven projects funded from
the special-purpose fund (in total, fifteen innovative development projects for a total of 2.5 billion rubles passed corporate procedures and reached the acquisition stage) and concluded twenty R&D agreements funded under the investment program;
• The Company completed registration and documentation for the technological platform for Prospective Technologies for Renewable Energy;
• The Company launched a pilot project to create a brand new type of wind power plant using the technological platform infrastructure;
• The Company launched major supporting projects to lay the foundation for efficient innovative management to develop local regulations governing the Company’s innovative development; the project to develop the
knowledge management information system for the Company, its SDCs and the much needed project management system;
• The Company developed and introduced the procedure for the expert evaluation of innovative development projects. To carry out independent expert evaluation, the Company established the Innovative Development Unit at the Company’s Research and Technical Council and formed an Innovative Project Committee;
• The Company developed a management model for innovative development;
• The Company expands and maintains relationships with higher education institutions under its innovative development program;
• The Company conducted negotiations with top development institutions and funds.
FUNDING PROGRAM EFFORTSIn 2011, innovative development was primarily funded from the Company’s equity. Funds for one project were raised from the Russian Fund for Technological Develop-ment (hereinafter, RFTD) under the technological platform for Prospective Technologies for Renewable Energy, which the Company founded and supervises.To efficiently fund the Program, the Company:• Formed the Targeted Research and Technical Fund,
reserving target funds on the basis of a 100%-owned subsidiary of JSC Research Institute for Energy Structures (NIIES) selected by the Program operator;
• Developed and introduced Funding Rules for Innovative Development Program Projects, which define the activities of the Company and its SDCs across all stages of Program financing.
The Company’s business plan contemplates funding innova-tive development projects from the Company’s funds, which are transferred as a contribution to the Charter Capital of a 100%-owned subsidiary of the Company selected by the Program operator. For the above-mentioned purposes, the business plan defines the following funding schedule for the next several years:
2011 2012F 2013F 2014F 2015F
3,245 3,505 4,075 4,837 5,120
INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM FUNDING, MILLION RUBLES
The Company has established a system to select innovative projects.Initial project review will be carried out by JSC RusHydro’s strategic and innovative unit. The projects will be selected
based on project funding rules, which define principles, pro-cedures and selection criteria based on project categories (breakthrough or improvement).
58
annual report / 2011
INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT
Knowledge management systems, production process management systems, systems for multi-dimensional sim-ulation and project management;HR development: three projects launched;Projects aimed at innovative training of employees, includ-ing prospective employees at schools; Corporate management: four projects launched and 1 project under review;Innovative projects focused on corporate management and various business support processes.Several innovative development projects launched and im-plemented by the Company enabled it to develop innova-tive technologies and technical solutions which emerged as new solutions on the domestic and/or international market (breakthrough innovations). The most remarkable break-through projects included:Development of new types of power equipment and structures for wave power plantsThe Company developed a pioneering experimental wave power plant VOLNES-30 with an installed capacity of 30 kW, which uses an advanced efficient low pressure air turbine (referred to as the “orthogonal turbine”).The above-type of plant may be installed in the sea near the shore, and eventually, on shore, dykes and embankments and at tidal power plant dams, etc.; used to generate en-ergy for local customers or energy systems and to quench waves at these structures.Development and implementation of asynchronized high-voltage generators to enhance the Company’s HPPsThe use of asynchronized variable speed generators ena-bles the Company to meet the challenge of upgrading the performance and reliability of basic equipment at the HPPs and PSPPs. In 2011, the Company developed guidelines on installing asynchronized and high-voltage generators. In 2012-2013, the Company plans to create the first experi-mental unit and install several generators at new corporate facilities.
KEY PROGRAM EFFORTSEfforts to implement new technologiesIn 2011, the Company launched new projects aimed at up-grading performance in the following areas (several pro-jects simultaneously refer to the same area):Safety and reliability: nine launched projects and five projects under review; The projects are aimed at boosting safety and reliability of operation; preventive maintenance and monitoring; miti-gating exposure to human factor risks; extend service life, etc. New generation: two projects launched; Development of new energy generation types.Energy efficiency: six projects launched and two projects under review;Upgrades of existing energy generation technologies; cut-ting losses in energy, heating and water; and energy recu-peration;Environment: six projects launched and one project under review; mitigating exposure to harmful man-made environ-mental impact; environmental reclamation and restoration, etc;Water resources: six projects launched and one project under review;Technologies related to water resource management, stor-age, purification and preparation of water and efficient wa-ter resource usage;Construction materials and technologies: five projects launched and five projects under review;Design methods, development of new materials, methods and their application, new technologies for facility construc-tion, which enables considerable cost-cutting and reduc-tions in construction time;Energy generation materials and technologies: two projects launched and two projects under review;New construction materials, technologies for processing and upgrading, which enable cost-cutting and the enhance-ment of generation performance;IT projects: six projects launched;
R&D EXPENSES OVER THE LAST THREE YEARS
Costs/Revenue RUR million 2009
Costs/Revenue RUR million 2010
Costs/Revenue RUR million 2011
Costs Revenue % Costs Revenue % Costs Revenue %
60.65 78,995.0 0.09 19.52 88,979.5 0.02 2,482.5 99,236 2.5
* This is a projected value, 2011 revenue includes SDCs involved in the program
59
annual report / 2011
INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT
Development of a pump storage plant with under-ground building and lower pool location (PSHPP-UL)The concept of a pump storage plant with underground building and lower pool location (PSHPP-UL) was developed in 2011. The process of concept development involved the selection of several sites for the projected PSHPP-UL, main project technical parameters, possible structure composi-tions and the main technical equipment. The project also defined PSHPP-UL construction technologies.The project offered new solutions to boost the construction performance (cut nominal construction costs and increase energy efficiency of PSHPP-UL).Experimental unit: Geo-thermal 2.5 MW power gen-erating unit with a binary cycle at the Pauzhetskaya GeoPPThis project was implemented to create Russia’s first geo-thermal binary cycle energy unit. Streamlining the operat-ing technology of this energy unit and selecting reasonable modes will considerably enhance the performance of geo-thermal power plants. New developments and solutions un-der this project may be successfully used further both in the geo-thermal energy industry and for useful energy genera-tion by utilizing low-potential energy, which is usually “dis-charged” into the environment by many power-consuming industries, including: metallurgy and cement, etc.
Cooperation with leading higher education institutions, research organizations and small- and medium-sized businessesThe Board of Directors has developed and approved the Concept of Cooperation with Sector-Based Research and Academic Institutes and Universities.In 2010, 471 students completed an internship at JSC RusHydro, including 47 students who did their internship programs in the Company’s research and design institutes. As a result, the Company employed 39 students, including 13 graduates who were employed by its research institutes.RusHydro concluded cooperation agreements with the fol-lowing industry-based universities:• Moscow Energy Institute;• Moscow State Construction University;• Siberian Federal University; and• St. Petersburg State Polytechnical University.
RusHydro has entered into a Strategic Partnership Agree-ment with Siberian Federal University. Currently, the Com-pany is negotiating similar agreements with Far-Eastern Federal University and Northern (Arctic) Federal University. A new cooperation agreement with Moscow Energy Insti-tute has been approved.
Involvement in the technological platform for prospective technologies in renewable energy and other technological platformsIn 2011, the Company completed registering and incorpo-rating its technological platform (TP).The following TP governing bodies were established: man-agement – the Management Body and the Expert Coun-cil; operation – the Coordination Council and Work Groups across all technical areas of TP operation (hydro-power, wind energy; tidal energy, wave and flood energy; solar energy; geo-thermal energy; energy storage; hydrogen energy and other RES technologies; and energy supply sys-tems based on comprehensive RES applications).Proposals from TP members were used to generate the 2015 draft R&D schedule (more than 50 projects).Company and TP staff members carried out negotiations with Russia’s top development institutes and foundations. They executed joint protocols, which defined further ef-forts to be made for signing cooperation agreements. In December 2011, RusHydro signed a Strategic Partnership and Cooperation Memorandum with the Russian Fund for Technological Development (RFTD). Subject to this Memo-randum, the RFTD shall provide strategic support to pro-jects recommended by the Platform. It also contemplates that the Platform will assist the RFTD in expert evaluations of fund-raising proposals on relevant areas of the Platform’s operations reviewed by the RFTD: expert evaluation ser-vices will be provided by individual experts and legal enti-ties proposed by the Platform for valuable consideration. To supervise cooperation under the Memorandum, the parties will establish internal management bodies and units.The Platform is responsible for implementing the break-through innovative project “Closed Wind Turbine” CWT. The project’s business purpose is to set up production of 100 kW wind power plants. Targeted users for energy plants based on these wind energy units include remote and iso-lated consumers who have no access to energy generated by existing grids.Project financing involves leverage financing from the RFTD.The CWT project fully complies with goals and objectives of the Technological Platform for Prospective Technologies in Renewable Energy, which is supervised by JSC RusHydro. Industry experts view it as a “breakthrough” project for the Russian industry. CWT project outcomes are expected to considerably increase existing global levels for wind energy technologies.
60
annual report / 2011
FINANCIAL RESULTSThis section is prepared based on the consolidated financial statements of RusHydro Group (hereinafter “the Group”), in accordance with International Financial Reporting Stand-ards (IFRS).2011 milestones that affected the Group’s financial perfor-mance included:
Total corporate assets increased 9.0% in 2011 or RUR 66,790 million. At the end of the reporting year, total corporate as-sets stood at RUR 811,783 million.
ASSETS STRUCTURE, RUR MILLION
2011
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900
2010 658,189
164,727580,266
153,594
Non-current assets
Сurrent assets
INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT
CORPORATE ASSETS, EQUITY AND LIABILITIES
RUR million 2010 2011
Total assets 744,993 811,783
Non-current assets 580,266 658,189
Current assets, including: 164,727 153,594
Non-current assets and assets of disposal group classified as held for saleAssets of subsidiary acquired exclusively with a view for resale
55,193–
–28,470
Total equity and liabilities 744,993 811,783
Equity 539,568 525,659
Non-current liabilities 106,194 159,965
Current liabilities, including: Liabilities of disposal group classified as held for saleLiabilities of subsidiary acquired exclusively with a view for resale
99,23129,506–
126,159–13,093
Property, plant and equipment (hereinafter “PPE”) is the principal component of Group assets (70.0% of total as-sets or RUR 568,629 million). The PPE share in total assets remained almost unchanged from the 2010 level (a 0.4% increase).
• In November 2011, the Company signed a loan agreement with OJSC Sberbank of Russia to open a closed-end credit line to finance current, financing and investment activities with a RUR 40,000 million limit and a period for granting the loan till January 31st, 2012;
• In April 2011, the Company placed non-convertible interest-bearing series 01 and 02 bonds with a nominal value of RUR 10,000 million and RUR 5,000 million, respectively.
As of December 31st, 2011, equity comprised 64.8% of total equity and liabilities. At the end of 2011, the Group’s eq-uity was RUR 525,659 million (compared with RUR 539,568 million as of December 31st, 2010), representing a 2.6% decline.
61
annual report / 2011
FINANCIAL RESULTS
EQUITY AND LIABILITIES STRUCTURE, RUR MILLION
2011
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900
2010
126,159
Eguity
Non-current Liabilities
Current Liabilities
99,231106,194539,568
525,659 159,965
Trade receivables
VAT recoverable
Income tax receivable
20,507
10,945
3,043
3,0974,370 26,603
10,984
3,718
4,4324,134
Advances to suppliers and other prepayments
Other receivables
The total liabilities/net assets ratio reached 54.4% as of December 31st, 2011, compared with 38.1% as of December 31st, 2010.
As of December 31st, 2011, total corporate liabilities equaled RUR 286,124 million, a 39.3% increase compared to the beginning of the reporting year. Current liabilities increased
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE STRUCTURE, RUR MILLION
2010 2011
RUR 26,928 million (or 27.1%) and non-current liabilities rose RUR 53,771 million (or 50.6%).
62
annual report / 2011
As of December 31st, 2011, the Group had a debt to the Russian Federation (represented by the Federal Agency for State Property Management) in the amount of RUR 2,649 million, with respect to an additional share issue by the Company’s subsidiary, JSC Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP, and
RUR million As of December 31st, 2010 As of December 31st, 2011
Trade payables 15,011 22,375
Advances received 4,601 6,101
Settlements with personnel 5,376 5,562
Dividends payable 44 54
Other accounts payable 2,526 5,938
Total accounts payable and accruals 27,558 40,030
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND ACCRUALS STRUCTURE
FINANCIAL RESULTS
During the reporting period, accounts payable and accruals increased RUR 12,472 million and stood at RUR 40,030 million at the end of 2011.
RUR 748 million with respect to an additional share issue of the Company’s subsidiary, JSC RAO Energy System of the East (as of December 31st, 2010, there had been no such debt).
2010
2011
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
51,57931,187
102,62421,414
Non-current debt
Current debt
CURRENT AND NON-CURRENT DEBT STRUCTURE, RUR MILLION
As of December 31st, 2011, the Group’s principal creditors were:• OJSC Sberbank of Russia (non-renewable line of credit
for financing of the operating, financial and investment activities);
• Holders of Euro-bonds issued by RusHydro Finance Ltd (October 2010);
• Holders of Russian bonds issued by the Company (April 2011);
• OJSC Rosbank;• OJSC Gazprombank;• Holders of unsecured bonds issued by OJSC Yakutsk
Energo;
• The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) (a loan to fund the Program to upgrade and re-equip the Volzhsko-Kamskiy Cascade HPPs);
• EM Falcon Ltd (Morgan Stanley Bank International Ltd) (From April 1st, 2011, the Company has revised the terms of loan agreements with Morgan Stanley Bank International Ltd. This has lowered rates on loans from 8.75% to 8.65% on the loan due in 2013 and from MOSPRIME +1.50% to MOSPRIME +1.40 % on the loan due in 2014);
• The municipal authority of the Kamchatka Region (the loan was used to finance construction of the Verhne-Mutnovskaya GeoPP);
• CF Structured Products B.V. (the loan was used to finance construction of the Kashkhatau HPP).
During 2011, the Group increased non-current debts RUR 51,045 million and decreased current debts RUR 9,773 million, respectively.
63
annual report / 2011
FINANCIAL RESULTS
Expenses dropped 34.5% from RUR 479,119 million (in 2010) and stood at RUR 313,617 million. In 2011, the Group earned an operating profit of RUR 51,116 million, which represents a 67.1% increase compared with 2010.
The Group’s operating margin was 13.8%.In 2010, there were no significant changes in the revenue structure.
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
2011 371,696313,617
2010 534,876479,119
Revenue
Expenses
REVENUE AND EXPENSES STRUCTURE, RUR MILLION
In 2011, the Group’s revenue decreased RUR 163,180 million (or 30.5%) compared with 2010 and totaled RUR 371,696 million.
9,9078,295
280,176440,651
32,719
27,45622,10522,24821,935
Sales of electricity
Sales of capacity
Sales of heat
Other revenue
Government grants
41,890
REVENUE STRUCTURE, RUR MILLION
• A RUR 11,486 million decline in the investment bonus on the price of power;
• Disposal of distribution companies.
The principal drivers that affected revenue were:• An increase in the share of sales at unregulated prices
according to the liberalization schedule for the wholesale electricity and capacity market; electric energy sales on the DAM have grown 1.7 times;
Revenue from electricity sales accounted for 77.3% of total revenue. Capacity sales decreased by RUR 9,171 million y-o-y. In 2011, heat energy sales increased RUR 5,351 million compared with 2010, other revenue increased RUR 313 million.
2010 2011
64
annual report / 2011
FINANCIAL RESULTS
Purсhased electricity and capacity
Electricity distribution expenses
Employee benefit expenses
Fuel expenses
Depreciation of property, plant and eguipment
144,241
184,484
7,794
16,922 10,647
42,360
37,601
23,781 22,4537,206 6,452
Taxes other than on income
Third party services
Other expenses
14,7309,564
16,421
73,94082,624
46,371
45,145
Other materials
EXPENSES STRUCTURE, RUR MILLION
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
In 2011, there was a 22.7% increase in other materials expenses, depreciation of property, plant and equipment grew 11.5% and the employee benefit expenses increased 9.5%; at the same time, fuel expenses increased 20.1%.As a result, the Group’s 2011 profit was RUR 29,493. The Group’s profit margin was 7.9% during the reporting year.
In 2011, EBITDA (RAS) decreased RUR 2.215 million compared with 2010 and totaled RUR 83,418 million.
RUR million 2010 2011
Operating profit 30,585 51,116
Profit before income tax 18,494 43,712
Profit for the period 10,399 29,493
Earnings per ordinary share, RUR 0.0350 0.1146
In 2011, Group expenses declined RUR 165,502 million. The decline was primarily related to lower expenses on purchased electricity (capacity) and lower electricity distribution costs, which decreased RUR 101,860 million and RUR 70,301 million, respectively.
2010 2011
65
annual report / 2011
RUR million 2010 2011
Net cash generated by operating activities 50,515 64,669
Net cash used in investment activities (89,988) (80,965)
Net cash generated by financing activities 13,397 35,168
Decrease/increase in cash and cash equivalents (25,967) 18,949
FINANCIAL RESULTS
As a result, in 2011, cash flow was positive and stood at RUR 18,949 million – due to reducing net cash used in in-vestment activities and an increase in net cash generated by operating and financing activities.As of December 31st, 2011, cash and cash equivalents to-taled RUR 47,414 million (compared with RUR 28,465 mil-lion as of December 31st, 2010).
Net cash used in investment activities decreased RUR 9,023 million and stood at RUR 80,965. This can principally be attributed to the lower purchase cost of securities, despite an increase in the acquisition costs of property, plant and equipment.Cash flows from the Group’s financing activities increased 162.5% to RUR 35,168 million (from RUR 13,397 million during the previous year). The principal factor driving this increase was raising RUR 23,520 million under the Loan Agreement with OJSC Sberbank of Russia.
CASH FLOWS
In 2011, the Group’s net cash generated by operating activities increased to RUR 64,669 million against RUR 50,515 mil-lion in 2010.
2 0 1 12 0 1 1
2 0 1 1
RusHydro
an
nu
al
rep
ort
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
4.1
4.2
68
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
The Company’s corporate governance system is based on principles set forth in JSC RusHydro’s Code of Corporate Governance.
National corporate governance rating 7+
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE PRINCIPLESAs a public company, JSC RusHydro views an effective and well-established corporate governance system as critical to enhancing corporate capital value, boosting goodwill toward the Company and reducing investment risks.In 2011, the Consortium of the Russian Institute of Direc-tors and Expert RA Rating Agency increased JSC RusHy-dro’s rating. This ranking is one of the highest for Russian companies.The Company has low risks related to corporate govern-ance practices, complies with Russian legal requirements related to corporate governance and follows most recom-mendations of the Corporate Governance Code and some recommendations of best international corporate govern-ance practices.
69
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
SHAREHOLDER RELATIONSJSC RusHydro’s shareholders include more than 300,000 Russian and foreign investors. The Company seeks to pro-vide all shareholders with equal and prompt access to the most relevant information on major corporate activities.
News, financial and industry information, securities value updates and other essential materials are posted on the Company’s web site. Shareholders who have any questions related to their rights can call a hotline number or send an e-mail.
RUSHYDRO’S CORPORATEGOVERNANCE PRINCIPLES
TRANSPARENCYACCOUNTABILITY
FAIRNESSGOOD FAITH
Shareholders, the Company, its bodies, officers and other
stakeholders shall exercise their rights in good faith and prevent
any abuses of said rights.
The Code contemplates the accountability of the Board of Directors to all shareholders in accordance with applicable law;
and is used by the Board of Directors as a guideline to
develop strategy, manage and control the executive bodies of the Company. The Management Board and the Chairman of the
Management Board are accountable to the Board of
Directors of JSC RusHydro and the General Meeting of
Shareholders
JSC RusHydro shall properly disclose reliable information on all
essential facts related to its activity, including its financial
status, social, environmental and business performance, property
structure and Company management and provide free
access to such information to any interested party.
JSC RusHydro agrees to defend shareholders’ rights and treat all shareholders equally. The Board
of Directors provides all shareholders with effective
remedies in case of violation(s)
National corporate governance rating 7+
Web site www.rushydro.ru, www.eng.rushydro.ru
Official print media Izvestia newspaper
Hotline for shareholders 8-800-555-9997
E-mail [email protected]
Global depositary receipt holders may contact The Bank of New York Mellon, a depositary bank, or the Company’s Corpo-rate Management Department and IR Department.
70
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
MANAGEMENT AND CONTROL BODIESORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE OF THE COMPANY’S MANAGEMENT AND CONTROL BODIES
EXTERNAL AUDITOR
GENERAL MEETING OFSHAREHOLDERS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS AUDIT COMMISSION
CommitteesCommittee on Reliability, Energy
Efficiency and InnovationAudit Committee
HR and Remuneration CommitteeInvestment Committee
Strategy Committee
CHAIRMAN OF THE MANAGEMENT
BOARDCORPORATE SECRETARY
MANAGEMENT BOARD
INTERNAL CONTROLAND RISK MANAGEMENT
DIRECTORМИ
BRANCHES
SDCs
ApprovalAudit report on the Company’s financial statements
Election
Management / Control
Carrying out decisions
Carrying out decisions
Reliability report on the Company’s financial statements
Appointment
Recommendation
Appointment
Operations management
Appointment / Control
Reporting
Report
Management / Control
Management / Control
Appointment / Control
Inspection
Inspection
COMMITTEES
Election
71
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
ing at least 30 days prior to the date of the General Meet-ing; and if the agenda of an Extraordinary General Meeting includes items on electing members of the Board of Direc-tors, such notice shall be given at least 70 days before said General Meeting.A basic shareholder right involves the opportunity to vote on agenda items at the General Meeting of Shareholders, which may be executed either by attendance at the Meeting or by sending ballots by mail. To observe the rights of depositary receipt holders to vote on the agenda at the General Meeting of Shareholders, JSC RusHydro cooperates with the depositary bank (the Bank of New York Mellon), as well as with JSC ING BANK (EURA-SIA), its custodian.In 2011, the Company held an Annual General Meeting of Shareholders. Information on the addressed issues is set forth in the Appendix.
GENERAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERSThe General Meeting of Shareholders is the Company’s highest management body; the competency of the General Meeting of Shareholders is defined by the Russian Federal Law on Joint Stock Companies and RusHydro’s Articles of Association. The procedure for preparing and holding the meeting and the shareholders’ decision-making process is set forth in the Regulations on Convening and Holding the General Meeting of Shareholders.The decision to convene the General Meeting of Sharehold-ers is made by the Board of Directors at its own initiative or at the request of the Audit Commission, the Auditor or shareholder(s) owning at least ten percent of the Compa-ny’s voting shares at the date of said request.The shareholders shall be given notice of the General Meet-
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORSThe Board of Directors is a collegial body responsible for general corporate management. The Board of Directors de-velops JSC RusHydro’s strategy and controls its executive bodies to maintain the rights and lawful interests of the Company’s shareholders.Members of the Board of Directors are elected by a cu-mulative vote at the General Meeting of Shareholders for the period up to the next General Meeting of Shareholders. Members may be re-elected an unlimited number of times. The right to propose a candidate for the Board of Directors shall be vested on shareholders who hold at least two per-cent of the Company’s voting shares in total.The Board of Directors operates in accordance with Russian laws, the Articles of Association, the Corporate Governance Code and Regulations on Convening and Holding Meetings of the Board of Directors.JSC RusHydro’s Articles of Association stipulate that the fol-lowing issues fall within the exclusive competence of the Board of Directors: defining priority business areas, ap-proving long-term corporate development programs, in-cluding: approving the investment program and approving (updating) the Company’s key performance indicators and business plan.Changes in the composition of the Company’s Board of Directors result from the requirements on the mandatory election of the Board of Directors at the General Meeting of Shareholders.
Members of the Board of Directors before the 2011 Annual General Meeting of Shareholders: • Shmatko Sergey Ivanovich (Chairman);• Dod Yevgeny Vyacheslavovich;• Ballo Anatoly Borisovich;• Kovalchuk Boris Yurievich;• Beloborodov Sergey Sergeyevich;• Zimin Victor Mikhailovich;• Volkov Eduard Petrovich;• Kudryavy Victor Vasilyevich;• Kurtser Grigoriy Markovich;• Kutyin Nikolay Georgievich;• Malyshev Andrey Borisovich;• Seliverstova Marina Valeryevna;• Sharipov Rashid Ravelyevich.
The Board of Directors holds regular meetings at least once per month in accordance with the approved Action Plan. In 2011, the Board held 24 meetings, both in person and in the form of videoconferencing/correspondence. The current 13-member Board of Directors was elected June 30th, 2011 by the General Meeting of Shareholders.The Board of Directors includes six independent directors defined in accordance with the Code of Corporate Conduct and requirements of the UK Corporate Governance Code.
72
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name and Position Status of the Member of the Board of Directors
Date of Birth
Citizenship Education Curriculum Vitae Ownership of Company Shares
TATSIYVladimir VitalyevichChairman of the Board of DirectorsFirst Vice President, JSC Gazprombank
Non-executive director 1960 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Power Engineering InstitutePh.D. in Economics
2003-2007: Vice President, Head of the Depositary Center, Joint Stock Bank of the Gas Industry CJSC Gazprombank2007-2009: First Vice President, Head of the Depositary Center, JSC GazprombankFrom 2009 – First Vice President of JSC GazprombankCurrent positions:Chairman of the Board of Directors at JSC Saint Petersburg International Mercantile Exchange; JSC Clearing and Depositary Company; member of the Board of Directors at JSC Regional Investment Company; member of the Russian National Association of Securities Market Participants (NAUFOR); Holding IDGC; JSC CFR; JSC MICEX; a member of the Supervisory Board at the National Settlement Depository; and a member of the Guardian Board at the Moscow Power Engineering Institute (Technical University)
Holds no shares in the Company
DANILOV-DANILYANVictor IvanovichDeputy Chairman of the Board of Directors Director, Water Engineering Institute of RAS
Independent Director 1938 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Lomonosov Moscow State University Ph.D. in Economics, Professor, Member of the RAS
From 2003: Director, Water Engineering Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)From 2006: Head of the Water Resources Management Chair for the Ecological Department at the Russian University of Peoples’ FriendshipFrom 2007: Chief Editor of the Encyclopedia Publishing House, Infra-M Publishing GroupCurrent positions:Chairman of the Board of Directors at Sustainable Development Fund
Holds no shares in the Company
BELOBORODOVSergey SergeyevichGeneral DirectorLLC Corporation GAZENERGOPROM
Non-executive Director 1967 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology(MS in Operations Management, School of Business, Michigan Technological University)
2003-2005: General Manager at LLC EuroSibEnergo2005-2006: Advisor to the Board of Directors at LLC Basic Element2006-2007: First Deputy General Director LLC Corporation GAZENERGOPROMFrom 2007: General Director at LLC Corporation GAZENERGOPROMCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC ATC, JSC CFR and Chairman of the Supervisory Board at NP Market Council
Holds no shares in the Company
DOD Yevgeny VyacheslavovichChairman of the Management Board of RusHydro
Executive Director 1973 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Aviation Institute (State Technical University) MAI Ph.D. in Economics
2000-2008: General Director and Chairman of the Management Board (May 2008-2009) at JSC INTER RAO UESFrom November 2009: Chairman of the Management Board of JSC RusHydroCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC INTER RAO UES, JSC Irkutskenergo, JSC CFR; JSC ATC; JSC SO UES; member of the Supervisory Board at JSC All-Russian Regional Development Bank, NP Hydro-power of Russia; member of the Management Board at the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs; member of the Management Council at the International Center for Sustainable Energy Development
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.13 %
MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
73
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name and Position Status of the Member of the Board of Directors
Date of Birth
Citizenship Education Curriculum Vitae Ownership of Company Shares
TATSIYVladimir VitalyevichChairman of the Board of DirectorsFirst Vice President, JSC Gazprombank
Non-executive director 1960 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Power Engineering InstitutePh.D. in Economics
2003-2007: Vice President, Head of the Depositary Center, Joint Stock Bank of the Gas Industry CJSC Gazprombank2007-2009: First Vice President, Head of the Depositary Center, JSC GazprombankFrom 2009 – First Vice President of JSC GazprombankCurrent positions:Chairman of the Board of Directors at JSC Saint Petersburg International Mercantile Exchange; JSC Clearing and Depositary Company; member of the Board of Directors at JSC Regional Investment Company; member of the Russian National Association of Securities Market Participants (NAUFOR); Holding IDGC; JSC CFR; JSC MICEX; a member of the Supervisory Board at the National Settlement Depository; and a member of the Guardian Board at the Moscow Power Engineering Institute (Technical University)
Holds no shares in the Company
DANILOV-DANILYANVictor IvanovichDeputy Chairman of the Board of Directors Director, Water Engineering Institute of RAS
Independent Director 1938 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Lomonosov Moscow State University Ph.D. in Economics, Professor, Member of the RAS
From 2003: Director, Water Engineering Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)From 2006: Head of the Water Resources Management Chair for the Ecological Department at the Russian University of Peoples’ FriendshipFrom 2007: Chief Editor of the Encyclopedia Publishing House, Infra-M Publishing GroupCurrent positions:Chairman of the Board of Directors at Sustainable Development Fund
Holds no shares in the Company
BELOBORODOVSergey SergeyevichGeneral DirectorLLC Corporation GAZENERGOPROM
Non-executive Director 1967 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology(MS in Operations Management, School of Business, Michigan Technological University)
2003-2005: General Manager at LLC EuroSibEnergo2005-2006: Advisor to the Board of Directors at LLC Basic Element2006-2007: First Deputy General Director LLC Corporation GAZENERGOPROMFrom 2007: General Director at LLC Corporation GAZENERGOPROMCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC ATC, JSC CFR and Chairman of the Supervisory Board at NP Market Council
Holds no shares in the Company
DOD Yevgeny VyacheslavovichChairman of the Management Board of RusHydro
Executive Director 1973 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Aviation Institute (State Technical University) MAI Ph.D. in Economics
2000-2008: General Director and Chairman of the Management Board (May 2008-2009) at JSC INTER RAO UESFrom November 2009: Chairman of the Management Board of JSC RusHydroCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC INTER RAO UES, JSC Irkutskenergo, JSC CFR; JSC ATC; JSC SO UES; member of the Supervisory Board at JSC All-Russian Regional Development Bank, NP Hydro-power of Russia; member of the Management Board at the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs; member of the Management Council at the International Center for Sustainable Energy Development
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.13 %
74
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Name and Position Status of the Member of the Board of Directors
Date of Birth
Citizenship Education Curriculum Vitae Ownership of Company Shares
ZIMINVictor MikhailovichPrime Minister of the Republic of Khakassia
Non-executive Director 1962 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Tomsk State Architecture and Construction University
004-2007: Deputy Chief for Construction — newly constructed units of the Abakan Department of the Krasnoyarsk Railway Division Chief — ОАО Russian Railways branch office2007-2009: Russian State Duma Deputy in the Federal AssemblyFrom 2009: Prime Minister of the Government of the Republic of Khakassia
Holds no shares in the Company
KOVALCHUKBoris YurievichChairman of the Management Board, JSC INTER RAO UES
Independent Director 1977 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Saint Petersburg State University
2006-2009: Assistant to the First Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and Director of the Department for Priority National Projects for the Russian Government2009: Member of the Management Board and Deputy General Director for the Organizational Development of RosatomFrom 2009: Chairman of the Management Board at JSC INTER RAO UESCurrent positions:Chairman of the Board of Directors at JSC OGK-1, JSC Kambaratinskaya HPP, JSC Energy Supply Company, JSC Altayenergosbyt, JSC Mosenergosbyt, JSC Saratovenergosbyt, JSC Tambovenergosbyt, JSC Petersburg Energy Supply Company, member of the Board of Directors at JSC INTER RAO UES, JSC ATC, LLC Inter RAO – WorleyParsons, JSC Irkutskenergo, and the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs
Holds no shares in the Company
KUDRYAVYVictor Vasilyevich Advisor to the President,JSC Eurocement Group
Independent Director 1937 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Ivanovo Power Engineering InstitutePh.D. in EngineeringHonored Russian Energy Industry Worker
From 2005: Advisor to the President, JSC Eurocement GroupCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC Holding IDGC
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.00025%
KURTSERGrigory MarkovichPresident JSC All-Russian Regional Development Bank
Non-executive Director 1980 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Finance Academy under the Russian Government
2007-2009: Department Chief of Financial Administration Treasury Resource Management, Deputy Treasury Chief – Foreign Trade Bank Department Chief of the Financial Administration Treasury Resource Management, JSC VTBFrom 2010: Director and President at JSC All-Russian Regional Development BankCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC INTER RAO UES, RUSENERGO FUND LIMITED, JSC RAO ES of the East, JSC Far Eastern Bank, member of the Fund Council at NEFTEGARANT
Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.00025%
LEBEDEVVictor YurievichDeputy Department Director, Russian Ministry of Economic Development
Non-executive Director 1980 RUSSIAN FEDERATION St. Petersburg Trade and Economy Institute
From 2006: Different positions at the Russian Ministry of Economic Development Holds no shares in the Company
75
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name and Position Status of the Member of the Board of Directors
Date of Birth
Citizenship Education Curriculum Vitae Ownership of Company Shares
ZIMINVictor MikhailovichPrime Minister of the Republic of Khakassia
Non-executive Director 1962 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Tomsk State Architecture and Construction University
004-2007: Deputy Chief for Construction — newly constructed units of the Abakan Department of the Krasnoyarsk Railway Division Chief — ОАО Russian Railways branch office2007-2009: Russian State Duma Deputy in the Federal AssemblyFrom 2009: Prime Minister of the Government of the Republic of Khakassia
Holds no shares in the Company
KOVALCHUKBoris YurievichChairman of the Management Board, JSC INTER RAO UES
Independent Director 1977 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Saint Petersburg State University
2006-2009: Assistant to the First Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and Director of the Department for Priority National Projects for the Russian Government2009: Member of the Management Board and Deputy General Director for the Organizational Development of RosatomFrom 2009: Chairman of the Management Board at JSC INTER RAO UESCurrent positions:Chairman of the Board of Directors at JSC OGK-1, JSC Kambaratinskaya HPP, JSC Energy Supply Company, JSC Altayenergosbyt, JSC Mosenergosbyt, JSC Saratovenergosbyt, JSC Tambovenergosbyt, JSC Petersburg Energy Supply Company, member of the Board of Directors at JSC INTER RAO UES, JSC ATC, LLC Inter RAO – WorleyParsons, JSC Irkutskenergo, and the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs
Holds no shares in the Company
KUDRYAVYVictor Vasilyevich Advisor to the President,JSC Eurocement Group
Independent Director 1937 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Ivanovo Power Engineering InstitutePh.D. in EngineeringHonored Russian Energy Industry Worker
From 2005: Advisor to the President, JSC Eurocement GroupCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC Holding IDGC
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.00025%
KURTSERGrigory MarkovichPresident JSC All-Russian Regional Development Bank
Non-executive Director 1980 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Finance Academy under the Russian Government
2007-2009: Department Chief of Financial Administration Treasury Resource Management, Deputy Treasury Chief – Foreign Trade Bank Department Chief of the Financial Administration Treasury Resource Management, JSC VTBFrom 2010: Director and President at JSC All-Russian Regional Development BankCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC INTER RAO UES, RUSENERGO FUND LIMITED, JSC RAO ES of the East, JSC Far Eastern Bank, member of the Fund Council at NEFTEGARANT
Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.00025%
LEBEDEVVictor YurievichDeputy Department Director, Russian Ministry of Economic Development
Non-executive Director 1980 RUSSIAN FEDERATION St. Petersburg Trade and Economy Institute
From 2006: Different positions at the Russian Ministry of Economic Development Holds no shares in the Company
76
annual report / 2011
Name and Position Status of the Member of the Board of Directors
Date of Birth
Citizenship Education Curriculum Vitae Ownership of Company Shares
MALYSHEVAndrey Borisovich Deputy Chairman of the Management Board, JSC ROSNANO
Non-executive Director 1959 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Power Engineering InstitutePh.D. in Sociology and Science
2006-2007: Deputy Head at the Federal Atomic Energy Agency2007-2011: Member of the Management Board, Deputy General Director at RosnanotechFrom 2011: Deputy Chairman of the Management Board, JSC ROSNANO (formerly, Rosnanotech)Current positions:Deputy Chairman of the Board of Directors at JSC FGC UES, JSC TREKPOR TECHNOLOGY, Chairman of the Board of Directors at JSC Prepreg-SKM, JSC Galileo-Nanotech, LLC SITRONICS-Nano, LLC Lithium-Ion Technology, LLC NTFarma, LLC Hemacore, LLC SinBio, member of the Board of Directors at JSC CECM and member of the Management Board at the Infrastructure Educational Programs Fund
Holds no shares in the Company
POLUBOYARINOVMikhail IgorevichDeputy Chairman of Vnesheconombank
Independent Director 1966 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Finance InstitutePh.D. in Economics
2003-2009: Deputy General Director at JSC Aeroflot – Russian Airlines2009-2011: Director of the Infrastructure Department of VnesheconombankFrom 2011: Deputy Chairman of VnesheconombankCurrent positions: Member of the Board of Directors at JSC Health Resorts of the North Caucasus and the Infrastructure Educational Program Fund
Holds no shares in the Company
SHARIPOV Rashid Ravelyevich Deputy Director GeneralLLC KFK-Consult
Independent Director 1968 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow State Institute for International RelationsWest California Law SchoolMaster Degree in Law
From 2006: Deputy Director General at LLC KFK-ConsultCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC FGC UES, JSC Irkutskenergo and a member of the Supervisory Board at JSC All-Russian Regional Development Bank and JSC SO UES
Holds no shares in the Company
SHISHINSergey VladimirovichSenior Vice PresidentJSC VTB Bank
Independent Director 1963 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Higher Border Guard College of the KGB USSR; University of RGB USSRRussian Government Services Academy under the Russian PresidentPh.D. in Economics
From 2007: Senior Vice President at JSC VTB Bank, Professor, Deputy Chair of the Economic Theory Department at the Russian State Humanities University, Vice President of the Russian Society of EconomistsCurrent positions: Deputy Chairman of the Management Board at JSC Rosneft
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.00003% Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.00003%
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
77
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name and Position Status of the Member of the Board of Directors
Date of Birth
Citizenship Education Curriculum Vitae Ownership of Company Shares
MALYSHEVAndrey Borisovich Deputy Chairman of the Management Board, JSC ROSNANO
Non-executive Director 1959 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Power Engineering InstitutePh.D. in Sociology and Science
2006-2007: Deputy Head at the Federal Atomic Energy Agency2007-2011: Member of the Management Board, Deputy General Director at RosnanotechFrom 2011: Deputy Chairman of the Management Board, JSC ROSNANO (formerly, Rosnanotech)Current positions:Deputy Chairman of the Board of Directors at JSC FGC UES, JSC TREKPOR TECHNOLOGY, Chairman of the Board of Directors at JSC Prepreg-SKM, JSC Galileo-Nanotech, LLC SITRONICS-Nano, LLC Lithium-Ion Technology, LLC NTFarma, LLC Hemacore, LLC SinBio, member of the Board of Directors at JSC CECM and member of the Management Board at the Infrastructure Educational Programs Fund
Holds no shares in the Company
POLUBOYARINOVMikhail IgorevichDeputy Chairman of Vnesheconombank
Independent Director 1966 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow Finance InstitutePh.D. in Economics
2003-2009: Deputy General Director at JSC Aeroflot – Russian Airlines2009-2011: Director of the Infrastructure Department of VnesheconombankFrom 2011: Deputy Chairman of VnesheconombankCurrent positions: Member of the Board of Directors at JSC Health Resorts of the North Caucasus and the Infrastructure Educational Program Fund
Holds no shares in the Company
SHARIPOV Rashid Ravelyevich Deputy Director GeneralLLC KFK-Consult
Independent Director 1968 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Moscow State Institute for International RelationsWest California Law SchoolMaster Degree in Law
From 2006: Deputy Director General at LLC KFK-ConsultCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC FGC UES, JSC Irkutskenergo and a member of the Supervisory Board at JSC All-Russian Regional Development Bank and JSC SO UES
Holds no shares in the Company
SHISHINSergey VladimirovichSenior Vice PresidentJSC VTB Bank
Independent Director 1963 RUSSIAN FEDERATION Higher Border Guard College of the KGB USSR; University of RGB USSRRussian Government Services Academy under the Russian PresidentPh.D. in Economics
From 2007: Senior Vice President at JSC VTB Bank, Professor, Deputy Chair of the Economic Theory Department at the Russian State Humanities University, Vice President of the Russian Society of EconomistsCurrent positions: Deputy Chairman of the Management Board at JSC Rosneft
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.00003% Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.00003%
78
annual report / 2011
MEMBERS OF THE STRATEGY COMMITTEE
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name Position
MALYSHEV Andrey Borisovich
Chairman of the Strategy CommitteeMember of the Board of DirectorsDeputy Chairman of the Management Board, JSC ROSNANO
BELOBORODOVSergey Sergeyevich
Member of the Board of DirectorsGeneral Director of LLC Corporation Gazenergoprom
GAVRILOVVsevolod Valeryanovich
Head of the Division of Project Management in Energy Conservation and Natural Resource Management Sectors of Sberbank of Russia
GOREVYevgeny Yevgenyevich
Member of the Management Board
DANILOV-DANILYANVictor Ivanovich
Deputy Chairman of the Board of DirectorsDirector, Water Engineering Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)
MEZHEVICHValentin Yefimovich
Member of the Federation Council of the Russian Federal Assembly, First Deputy Chairman of the Natural Monopoly Committee of the Federation Council
POLUBOYARINOVMikhail Igorevich
Member of the Board of DirectorsDeputy Chairman of Vnesheconombank
RIZHINASHVILIGeorge Ilyich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Board
SKRYABIN Dmitry Igorevich
Senior Dealer of the Equity Management Department at VTB Capital
TIKHONOVAMaria Gennadievna
Director of the Department for Economic Regulation and Property Relations at the Fuel and Energy Sector of the Russian Ministry of Energy
YUGOVAlexander Sergeyevich
Head of the Department of Oil and Gas Industry and Raw Materials Division of the Infrastructure Sector Management of the Federal Property Management Agency
COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORSCommittees of the Board of Directors are established to preliminarily review the most critical matters that fall under the competence of the Board of Directors. The Committees must report to the Board of Directors. The Board of Direc-tors is responsible for ensuring regular and efficient coop-eration with its Committees. Reports on the Committees’ operations are reviewed annually at meetings of the Board of Directors.The Committees include persons with expertise and knowl-edge in relevant areas, which enhances the performance and quality of Board of Directors’ activities. The number of members on each Committee is defined to enable a thor-ough discussion of addressed issues and to reasonably con-
sider different points-of-view. The Committees acts in ac-cordance with the Regulations on Committees of the Board of Directors.In accordance with best corporate governance practices, the Audit Committee and the HR and Remuneration Com-mittee shall include only independent directors who are members of the Board of Directors.In 2011, the Company introduced the practice of holding joint committee meetings to ensure a more detailed and efficient review of issues. Most meetings are held in person.
The Strategy CommitteeThe Strategy Committee is responsible for enhancing the Company’s long-term performance and developing recom-mendations on upgrading the current growth strategy.The Chairman and Committee members were elected by a resolution of the Board of Directors of July 22, 2011.
79
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
MEMBERS OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
The Audit CommitteeThe Committee is responsible for control by the Board of Directors over the Company’s financial and business ac-tivities; the Committee also develops recommendations for selecting an independent audit organization and the pro-cedure for cooperating with the Audit Commission and the external auditor.The Chairman and Committee members were elected by a resolution of the Board of Directors on July 22, 2011.
In 2011, the Committee held eighteen meetings, including four joint meetings with the Investment Committee and the Reliability, Energy Efficiency and Innovation Committee. The meetings developed recommendations for the Board of Di-rectors on approving the 2012-2025 Program for Integrated Modernization of RusHydro’s Generating Facilities and a list of priority projects implemented under RusHydro’s Innova-tive Development Program and the Cooperation Concept with sector-based research and academic institutes on the matters related to the Program implementation.
In 2011, the Committee held eight meetings. The main is-sues addressed at meetings included: the preliminary re-view of the Company’s financial statement (prepared un-der RAS and IFRS), the development of recommendations to the Board of Directors for selecting an external auditor and defining service cost and the assessment of fairness/independency of agreements concluded with the Auditor, as well as control over the use of the Company’s insider information.
The HR and Remuneration CommitteeThe HR and Remuneration Committee of the Board of Di-rectors was established to hire highly qualified managers and create necessary incentives for their successful work. The Committee is responsible for developing principles and criteria to define remuneration and bonuses payable to members of the Board of Directors, the Chairman of the Management Board and Management Board members, as well as for issuing recommendations (reports) to the Board of Directors on the above-mentioned topics.The Chairman and Committee members were elected by a resolution of the Board of Directors on July 25, 2011.
Name Position
DANILOV-DANILYANVictor Ivanovich
Chairman of the HR and Remuneration CommitteeDeputy Chairman of the Board of DirectorsDirector, Water Engineering Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)
POLUBOYARINOVMikhail Igorevich
Member of the Board of DirectorsDeputy Chairman of Vnesheconombank
SHARIPOVRashid Ravelyevich
Member of the Board of DirectorsDeputy Director General at LLC KFK-Consult
MEMBERS OF THE HR AND REMUNERATION COMMITTEE
Name Position
DANILOV-DANILYANVictor Ivanovich
Chairman of the Audit CommitteeDeputy Chairman of the Board of Directors Director, Water Engineering Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)
KUDRYAVYVictor Vasilyevich
Member of the Board of Directors Advisor to the President, JSC Eurocement Group
POLUBOYARINOVMikhail Igorevich
Member of the Board of Directors Deputy Chairman of Vnesheconombank
80
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
In 2011, the Committee held two meetings which reviewed appointment and replacement criteria (qualification re-quirements) for Management Board members and assessed the performance of the Board of Directors.
MEMBERS OF THE INVESTMENT COMMITTEE
The Investment CommitteeThe Investment Committee carries out preliminary reviews of investment projects and programs and upgrades and de-velops the Company’s investment policy.The Chairman and Committee members were elected by a resolution of the Board of Directors on July 22nd, 2011.
Name Position
TATSIYVladimir Vitalyevich
Chairman of the Investment CommitteeChairman of the Board of DirectorsFirst Vice President of JSC Gazprombank
DANILOV-DANILYANVictor Ivanovich
Deputy Chairman of the Board of DirectorsDirector, Water Engineering Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)
GRIGORIEVAlexander Valeryevich
General Director of Ingosstrakh
DUBOVSKY Igor Leonidovich
Deputy Head of the State Tariff Regulation Division of the Department for State Regulation of Tariffs, Infrastructure Reforms and Energy Efficiency of the Russian Ministry of Economic Development
KOROLEVIvan Sergeyevich
Deputy General Director at the Institute of Global Economics and International Relations of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)
MANTROVMikhail Alexeyevich
Chairman of the Management Board at JSC Svyaz-Bank
NIKONOVVasily Vladislavovich
Member of the Board of DirectorsDeputy Chairman of Vnesheconombank
NOZDRACHEVDenis Alexandrovich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Board
POLUBOYARINOVMikhail Igorevich
Director of the Department for Economic Regulation and Property Relations at the Fuel and Energy Sector of the Russian Ministry of Energy
RIZHINASHVILIGeorge Ilyich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Board
TIKHONOVAMaria Gennadievna
Director of the Department for Economic Regulation and Property Relations at the Fuel and Energy Sector of the Russian Ministry of Energy
The Reliability, Energy Efficiency and Innovation CommitteeThe Committee carries out preliminary reviews of technical policy, environmental policy and energy-conservation and efficiency policy, as well as the development of technical regulation standards and a long-term planning system for hydro-power and energy sectors based on other renewable energy sources (RES).The Chairman and Committee members were elected by a resolution of the Board of Directors on July 28, 2011.
In 2011, the Committee held eleven meetings focused on financing and implementing the Investment Program. The Committee developed methods to calculate and assess key performance indicators “Cutting Purchase Cost of Goods (Work/Service) per Product Item” and methods for calcu-lating the target prices of goods (work/service) for procure-ment activities under industrial and investment programs.
81
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
MEMBERS OF THE RELIABILITY, ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND INNOVATION COMMITTEE
Name Position
KUDRYAVYVictor Vasilyevich
Chairman of the CommitteeMember of the Board of Directors Advisor to the President, JSC Eurocement Group
ALZHANOVRakhmetulla Shamshievich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Board
VOLKOVEduard Petrovich
General Director at JSC Krzhizhanovsky Power Engineering Institute, Member of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)
BELLENDIRYevgeny Nilolayevich
General Director at JSC VNIIGR&D Director at JSC RusHydro
BOGUSHBoris Borisovich
Member of the Management Board
BOLGOVMikhail Vasilievich
Acting Deputy General Director, Water Engineering Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS)
ZIMINVictor Mikhailovich
Member of the Board of DirectorsPrime Minister of the Government of the Republic of Khakassia
KUTYINNikolay Georgievich
Head of Rostechnadzor
MASLOVAlexey Victorovich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Board
RIZHINASHVILIGeorge Ilyich
Deputy Chairman of the Management Board
TATSIYVladimir Vitalyevich
Chairman of the Board of DirectorsFirst Vice President, JSC Gazprombank
SHISHINSergey Vladimirovich
Member of the Board of DirectorsVice President, VTB
In 2011, the Committee held nine meetings, including 3 joint meetings with the Strategy Committee and the In-vestment Committee. The meetings focused on reviewing the Company’s technical policy and RusHydro’s integrated generation facility modernization for the 2012-2025 period. The Committee developed a method for calculating energy generation volumes with a view to annual water content forecasts.
The Management BoardThe Management Board is a collegiate executive body of the Company acting in accordance with the applicable Russian laws, the Articles of Association, the Corporate Governance Code and the Regulations on the Management Board and is governed by resolutions of the General Meeting of Share-holders and the Board of Directors.
The Management Board is responsible for implementing goals and development strategy and manages the Com-pany’s day-to-day operations to ensure high asset yield and the maximum profitability of RusHydro’s operations.The Chairman of the Management Board is responsible for operations and is the Company’s chief executive body.In 2011, meetings of the Management Board addressed issues related to current Company operations. The Man-agement Board also carried out preliminary discussions of all strategic issues which fall within the competence of the Company’s Board of Directors.
82
annual report / 2011
Name and Position Date of Birth Education Curriculum Vitae Sphere of Activity
Ownership of Company Shares
DODYevgeny VyacheslavovichChairman of the Management Board
1973 Moscow Aviation Institute (State Technical University) MAIPh.D. in Economics
From June 2000 to April 2008: General Director and Chairman of the Management Board (April 2008-March 2010) at JSC INTER RAO UESCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC INTER RAO UES, JSC Irkutskenergo, JSC CFR; JSC ATC; JSC SO UES; member of the Supervisory Board at JSC All-Russian Regional Development Bank, NP Hydro-power Industry of Russia; member of the Management Board at the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs; member of the Management Council at the International Center of Sustainable Energy DevelopmentDate office taken: 24.11.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: 23.11.2014
General management of the Company
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.13%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.13%
ALZHANOVRakhmetulla ShamshievichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
1950 Novocherkassk Polytechnic Institute 1995-2005: Deputy General Directorof the Cascade of the Zelenchuksky HPPs and Director of the Zelenchuksky HPPs – Deputy General Director of JSC Sevkavhydroenergostroy1998: Operations Director at JSC Zelenchuksky HPPs2005-2009: General Director at JSC Santgudinskaya HPP-1Current positions:Member of the Supervisory Board at NP Council of Energy Industry Veterans and Supervisory Board Hydro-power Industry of RussiaDate office taken: 24.11.2009 Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
OperationsChief Engineer
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.00005%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.00005%
MANTROVMikhail AlexeyevichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
1965 Moscow Power Engineering Institute Economic Academy under the President of the Russian Federation
2000-2008: Deputy General Director, Deputy General Director – Head of the Corporate Center and other executive positions at JSC INTER RAO UES2008-2009: Head of the Corporate Center at JSC INTER RAO UES, Deputy Chairman of the Management BoardDate office taken: 24.11.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Finance and economics
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.03%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.03%
MASLOVAlexey Victorovich Deputy Chairman of the Management Board
1975 Bauman Moscow State Technical UniversityFinance Academy of the Russian GovernmentPh. D in Economics
1999-2008: Different positions at JSC RAO UES of Russia and JSC FGC UES (worked in RAO UES of Russia since 1999, in 2002 was transferred from the post of Deputy Chief of the Investment Policy Department at RAO UES of Russia to the position of Director for Investments and Capital Construction at JSC FGC UES; from 2005-2010 – member of the Management Board of JSC FGC UES)2008-2010: General Director at JSC Engineering and Construction Management Center of the Unified Energy SystemJanuary-April 2010: Executive Director for Capital Construction at JSC RusHydroChairman of the Partnership Council at NP Union of Construction Companies, EnergoStroyAllianceDate office taken: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Capital construction and IT
Holds no shares in the Company
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
MEMBERS OF THE MANAGEMENT BOARD
83
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name and Position Date of Birth Education Curriculum Vitae Sphere of Activity
Ownership of Company Shares
DODYevgeny VyacheslavovichChairman of the Management Board
1973 Moscow Aviation Institute (State Technical University) MAIPh.D. in Economics
From June 2000 to April 2008: General Director and Chairman of the Management Board (April 2008-March 2010) at JSC INTER RAO UESCurrent positions:Member of the Board of Directors at JSC INTER RAO UES, JSC Irkutskenergo, JSC CFR; JSC ATC; JSC SO UES; member of the Supervisory Board at JSC All-Russian Regional Development Bank, NP Hydro-power Industry of Russia; member of the Management Board at the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs; member of the Management Council at the International Center of Sustainable Energy DevelopmentDate office taken: 24.11.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: 23.11.2014
General management of the Company
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.13%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.13%
ALZHANOVRakhmetulla ShamshievichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
1950 Novocherkassk Polytechnic Institute 1995-2005: Deputy General Directorof the Cascade of the Zelenchuksky HPPs and Director of the Zelenchuksky HPPs – Deputy General Director of JSC Sevkavhydroenergostroy1998: Operations Director at JSC Zelenchuksky HPPs2005-2009: General Director at JSC Santgudinskaya HPP-1Current positions:Member of the Supervisory Board at NP Council of Energy Industry Veterans and Supervisory Board Hydro-power Industry of RussiaDate office taken: 24.11.2009 Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
OperationsChief Engineer
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.00005%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.00005%
MANTROVMikhail AlexeyevichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
1965 Moscow Power Engineering Institute Economic Academy under the President of the Russian Federation
2000-2008: Deputy General Director, Deputy General Director – Head of the Corporate Center and other executive positions at JSC INTER RAO UES2008-2009: Head of the Corporate Center at JSC INTER RAO UES, Deputy Chairman of the Management BoardDate office taken: 24.11.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Finance and economics
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.03%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.03%
MASLOVAlexey Victorovich Deputy Chairman of the Management Board
1975 Bauman Moscow State Technical UniversityFinance Academy of the Russian GovernmentPh. D in Economics
1999-2008: Different positions at JSC RAO UES of Russia and JSC FGC UES (worked in RAO UES of Russia since 1999, in 2002 was transferred from the post of Deputy Chief of the Investment Policy Department at RAO UES of Russia to the position of Director for Investments and Capital Construction at JSC FGC UES; from 2005-2010 – member of the Management Board of JSC FGC UES)2008-2010: General Director at JSC Engineering and Construction Management Center of the Unified Energy SystemJanuary-April 2010: Executive Director for Capital Construction at JSC RusHydroChairman of the Partnership Council at NP Union of Construction Companies, EnergoStroyAllianceDate office taken: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Capital construction and IT
Holds no shares in the Company
84
annual report / 2011
Name and Position Date of Birth Education Curriculum Vitae Sphere of Activity
Ownership of Company Shares
RIZHINASHVILIGeorge IlyichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
1981 Lomonosov Moscow State University Ph.D. in Economics
2003-2007: Leading Specialist of Business Project Development, Chief Specialist of the Investment Office, Head of the Strategy and Investment Department, Director for Investments at JSC INTER RAO UES2008: Deputy Director for Strategy and Investments; March 2009: elected to the Management Board – Head of the Strategy and Investment Office of JSC INTER RAO UESDate office taken: 24.11.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Strategy and innovations
Holds no shares in the Company
TSOYSergey PetrovichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
1957 Suslov State University at RostovLomonosov Moscow State University Candidate in Political Sciences
1991-2010: Aide, Head of the Press Service for the Moscow Mayor and the Moscow Government and the Moscow Mayor’s Press Secretary2006-2010: Chairman of the Board of Directors of JSC TV CenterDate office taken: 01.12.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
GR, PR, international relations and administration
Holds no shares in the Company
ABRASHINSergey Nikolayevich
1959 Higher, with a specialty in radio engineering and law
2006-2008: Head of the Security Service at YUKOS2008-2009: Vice President, JSC TransnefteproductFrom 2010: Advisor to the Chairman of the Management Board, JSC RusHydroDate office taken: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Economic security Holds no shares in the Company
BESSMERTNYKonstantin Valeryevich
1973 Bauman Moscow State Technical UniversityThe Academy of the National Economy under the Russian Government, МВА
2000-2009: Advisor to the Chairman of the Management Board and Financial Director, JSC INTER RAO UES2009-2010: Director of the Moscow Branch at JSC Nizhnevartovskaya HPPApril 2010: Advisor to the Chairman of the Management Board, JSC RusHydroDate office taken: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Accounting and tax reporting
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.005%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.005%
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
MEMBERS OF THE MANAGEMENT BOARD
85
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name and Position Date of Birth Education Curriculum Vitae Sphere of Activity
Ownership of Company Shares
RIZHINASHVILIGeorge IlyichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
1981 Lomonosov Moscow State University Ph.D. in Economics
2003-2007: Leading Specialist of Business Project Development, Chief Specialist of the Investment Office, Head of the Strategy and Investment Department, Director for Investments at JSC INTER RAO UES2008: Deputy Director for Strategy and Investments; March 2009: elected to the Management Board – Head of the Strategy and Investment Office of JSC INTER RAO UESDate office taken: 24.11.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Strategy and innovations
Holds no shares in the Company
TSOYSergey PetrovichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
1957 Suslov State University at RostovLomonosov Moscow State University Candidate in Political Sciences
1991-2010: Aide, Head of the Press Service for the Moscow Mayor and the Moscow Government and the Moscow Mayor’s Press Secretary2006-2010: Chairman of the Board of Directors of JSC TV CenterDate office taken: 01.12.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
GR, PR, international relations and administration
Holds no shares in the Company
ABRASHINSergey Nikolayevich
1959 Higher, with a specialty in radio engineering and law
2006-2008: Head of the Security Service at YUKOS2008-2009: Vice President, JSC TransnefteproductFrom 2010: Advisor to the Chairman of the Management Board, JSC RusHydroDate office taken: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Economic security Holds no shares in the Company
BESSMERTNYKonstantin Valeryevich
1973 Bauman Moscow State Technical UniversityThe Academy of the National Economy under the Russian Government, МВА
2000-2009: Advisor to the Chairman of the Management Board and Financial Director, JSC INTER RAO UES2009-2010: Director of the Moscow Branch at JSC Nizhnevartovskaya HPPApril 2010: Advisor to the Chairman of the Management Board, JSC RusHydroDate office taken: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Accounting and tax reporting
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.005%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.005%
86
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name and Position Date of Birth Education Curriculum Vitae Sphere of Activity
Ownership of Company Shares
BOGUSHBoris Borisovich
1952 Saratov Polytechnical Institute – Tolyatti Polytechnical Institute The Academy of the National Economy under the Russian Government
2005-2007: Chief of the Production and Technical Policy Department, Deputy Head of the Production Business Unit, JSC MC HydroOGK2007-2010: Member of the Management Board, Managing Director and Head of the Production Business Unit, JSC RusHydro2009-2010: Managing Director, Head of the Production Business Unit, JSC RusHydroDate office taken: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Supervision of chief engineers at the facilities of the Company and SDCs’ facilities
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.003%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.003%
GORBENKOYury Vasilievich
1958 Krasnoyarsk Engineering and Construction InstitutePh. D. in Economics
From 1998: General Director at JSC Bureyskaya HPPJanuary 2008: Director of the Bureyskaya HPP, RusHydro’s branchJanuary 2008: Managing Director at JSC RusHydro, Head of the Far Eastern DivisionDate office taken: 17.09.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP renovation
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.005%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.005%
GOREVYevgeny Yevgenyevich
1975 Lomonosov Moscow State University 2006-2009: Director for Corporate Development, Head of the Legal Department, Deputy Head of the Corporate Center, JSC INTER RAO UESDate office taken: 24.11.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
corporate governance and legal affairs
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.004%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.004%
SAVINStanislav Valeryevich
1972 Moscow State Railroad University (MIIT)Ph.D. in Economics
2003-2010: Deputy Chief of the Russian Geographic Division, Head of the International Business Department for the Central Asian and Far Eastern Markets; Head of the Department for Central Asia and the Far East; Head of the Central Asia Geographic Division, Deputy Head and other positions at JSC INTER RAO UESDate of taking the office: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Sales Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.0035%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.0035%
MEMBERS OF THE MANAGEMENT BOARD
87
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name and Position Date of Birth Education Curriculum Vitae Sphere of Activity
Ownership of Company Shares
BOGUSHBoris Borisovich
1952 Saratov Polytechnical Institute – Tolyatti Polytechnical Institute The Academy of the National Economy under the Russian Government
2005-2007: Chief of the Production and Technical Policy Department, Deputy Head of the Production Business Unit, JSC MC HydroOGK2007-2010: Member of the Management Board, Managing Director and Head of the Production Business Unit, JSC RusHydro2009-2010: Managing Director, Head of the Production Business Unit, JSC RusHydroDate office taken: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Supervision of chief engineers at the facilities of the Company and SDCs’ facilities
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.003%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.003%
GORBENKOYury Vasilievich
1958 Krasnoyarsk Engineering and Construction InstitutePh. D. in Economics
From 1998: General Director at JSC Bureyskaya HPPJanuary 2008: Director of the Bureyskaya HPP, RusHydro’s branchJanuary 2008: Managing Director at JSC RusHydro, Head of the Far Eastern DivisionDate office taken: 17.09.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP renovation
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.005%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.005%
GOREVYevgeny Yevgenyevich
1975 Lomonosov Moscow State University 2006-2009: Director for Corporate Development, Head of the Legal Department, Deputy Head of the Corporate Center, JSC INTER RAO UESDate office taken: 24.11.2009Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
corporate governance and legal affairs
Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.004%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.004%
SAVINStanislav Valeryevich
1972 Moscow State Railroad University (MIIT)Ph.D. in Economics
2003-2010: Deputy Chief of the Russian Geographic Division, Head of the International Business Department for the Central Asian and Far Eastern Markets; Head of the Department for Central Asia and the Far East; Head of the Central Asia Geographic Division, Deputy Head and other positions at JSC INTER RAO UESDate of taking the office: 21.04.2010Term of office under the employment agreement: unlimited
Sales Interest in the Company’s charter capital: 0.0035%Interest in the Company’s ordinary shares: 0.0035%
88
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Name of the Management Body Member
Transaction Date
Transaction Number of Shares Involved
Charter Capital Stake before Transaction
Charter Capital Stake after Transaction
Dod Yevgeny VyacheslavovichChairman of the Management Board, member of the Board of Directors
14.06.2011 Acquisition 12,723,000 0 0.0044%
16.06.2011 Acquisition 18,000,000 0.0044% 0.01%
05.07.2011 Acquisition 125,000,000 0.01% 0.054%
09.08.2011 Acquisition 135,000,000 0.054% 0.1%
26.09.2011 Acquisition 78,000,000 0.1% 0.13%
Mantrov Mikhail AlexeyevichDeputy Chairman of the Management Board
23.08.2011 Acquisition 22,780,000 0.00073% 0.03%
Savin Stanislav Valeryevichmember of the Management Board
24.08.2011 Acquisition 10,045,000 0% 0.0035%
Gorbenko Yury Vasilievichmember of the Management Board
25.08.2011 Acquisition 13,163,000 0.0004% 0.005%
Bessmertny Konstantin Valeryevichmember of the Management Board
26.08.2011 Acquisition 15,000,000 0% 0.005%
Bogush Boris Borisovichmember of the Management Board
08.09.2011 Acquisition 9,979,000 0.00001% 0.003%
Gorev Yevgeny Yevgenyevichmember of the Management Board
22.09.2011 Acquisition 12,647,000 0% 0.004%
TRANSACTIONS WITH THE COMPANY’S SHARES MADE BY MEMBERS OF THE MANAGEMENT BODIES
89
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
THE COMPANY’S INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL AUDIT SYSTEMAn efficient system for controlling financial and business operations guarantees the integrity of the Company’s assets. The system for controlling JSC RusHydro’s financial and business operations includes the following key elements:
AUDIT COMMISSION
RUSHYDRO CONTROL SYSTEM
BOARD OF DIRECTORS (DIRECTLY OR
ACTING VIA THE AUDIT COMMITTEE)
INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL AUDITOR
DIRECTOR FOR INTERNAL CONTROL AND RISK
MANAGEMENT
The main principles, goals, objectives, methods and pro-cesses of the internal audit system are defined in the fol-lowing approved internal corporate documents:• The Corporate Governance Code;• Regulations on Internal Audit and Risk Management
Policy;• Regulations on the Board of Director’s Audit Committee; • Regulations on the Audit Commission.
The Audit CommissionThe key responsibilities of the Audit Commission include: controlling financial and business operations, supervising how the Company’s business and financial transactions comply with both Russian laws and JSC RusHydro’s Articles of Association and carrying out an independent evaluation of the Company’s financial status.The Audit Commission acts in accordance with Russian laws, the Articles of Association and the Regulation on the Audit Commission and is elected by the General Meeting of Shareholders for a one-year term. The Commission is made up of 5 members.
90
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
members of the Management Board and directors of audit-ed subsidiaries, affiliated entities and branches. Each report included a description of deficiencies identified by control efforts and proposals on remedying them and enhancing the performance of the Company’s internal audit system.
External Independent AuditorJSC RusHydro carries out an annual audit of its financial (accounting) reporting. Based on recommendation of the Company’s Board of Directors, the Annual General Meeting of Shareholders shall approve an independent auditor to carry out audits of RAS financial accounting.The Company applies a special procedure to select candi-dates for the independent financial audit; the procedure is conducted via open tender. The Tender Commission for this open tender is established by the Audit Committee. The Committee also approves the tender documents to award the service agreement to audit the Company’s financial (ac-counting) reporting.In April 2011, the Tender Commission carried out proce-dures to select JSC RusHydro’s auditor and selected a win-ner, HLB Vneshaudit (a closed joint stock company), which was recommended for approval at the Annual General Meeting of Shareholders. On June 30, 2011, JSC HLB Vneshaudit was approved as the independent external auditor by a resolution of the shareholders.
In 2011, the Audit Commission carried out one audit of fi-nancial and business operations of JSC RusHydro in 2010. The audit revealed no failures to comply with Russian law and confirmed the validity of information contained in the 2010 financial statement and accounting report.
The Internal Audit and Risk Management UnitThe Internal Audit and Risk Management Unit is responsible for the Company’s internal audit. The Unit includes the fol-lowing departments:• The Internal Audit Department;• The Internal Control Department; and• The Risk Management Division.
The Director for Internal Audit and Risk Management is the Head of the Internal Audit and Risk Management Unit. The Director for Internal Audit and Risk Management reports directly to the Chairman of the Management Board and is accountable to the Audit Committee.Timelines for the Internal Audit and Risk Management Unit are approved on an annual basis by the Audit Committee. The Director for Internal Audit and Risk Management sub-mits quarterly reports on implementing a timeline to the Audit Committee. In 2011, the Internal Audit Department fulfilled all control efforts considered under 2011 timelines. Reports prepared on the results of these control efforts were submitted to the Chairman of the Management Board,
Name Date of Birth Position
TIKHONOVAMaria Gennadievna
1980 Chairman of the Audit CommissionDirector of the Department for Economic Regulation and Property Relations at the Fuel and Energy Sector of the Russian Ministry of Energy
GOREVOYDmitry Mikhailovich
1982 Head of the Department for Energy Industry Development of the Division for State Tariff Regulation, Infrastructure Reform and Energy Efficiency at the Russian Ministry of Economic Development
KOLYADAAndrey Sergeyevich
1984 Head of the Department for Fuel, Energy and Coal Industry in the Infrastructure Sector Office and the Defense Industry at the Federal Agency for State Property Management
LITVINAYelena Yurievna
1987 Chief Expert at the Management Department of the Federal Agency for State Property Management
YUGOVAlexander Sergeyevich
1981 Head of the Department of Oil and Gas Industry and Raw Materials Division of the Infrastructure Sector Management of the Federal Property Management Agency
The following members of the Audit Commission were elected by a resolution of the Annual General Meeting of Sharehold-ers on June 30th, 2011:
91
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
REMUNERATION TO MANAGEMENT AND CONTROL BODIES
The Board of DirectorsRemuneration is defined in accordance with the Regula-tions on Remuneration to JSC RusHydro’s Board of Direc-tors based on fixed remuneration equal to 900,000 rubles and the total number of Board meetings during the previous year and the number of such meetings attended by a mem-ber of the Board of Directors.
Remuneration premiums are payable as follows:• 30% to the Chairman of the Board of Directors;• 20% to the Chairman of Board of Directors’ Committee; • 10% for membership on a Committee of the Board of
Directors.
Considering the above-mentioned premiums, the total re-muneration payable to a member of the Board of Directors shall not exceed 1 million rubles.No compensation (transportation expenses, accommoda-tions, etc.) related to the activities of members of the Board of Directors shall be provided.The Regulations on Payment of Remuneration and Compen-sation to Members of the Board of Directors shall not apply to members of the Board of Directors who simultaneously act as Chairman of the Management Board or as members of the Management Board (during either a full or partial term in office) nor to members of the Board of Directors who are restricted from receiving any payments from com-mercial organizations by Russian federal law.Total remuneration and compensation paid to Board of Directors members in 2011 (including for members of the Board who served prior to June 30th, 2011) was 5,876,307.69 rubles.
Management BoardRemuneration to the Chairman of the Management Board and members of the Management Board is defined by the Regulations on Remuneration and Compensation to Mem-bers of JSC RusHydro’s Management Board. To more closely match remuneration to members’ performance, the ratio of the fixed and variable salary for the Chairman of the Management Board and Management Board members is 30/70, respectively. The Regulations contemplate quarterly and annual bonus payments for meeting key performance indicators, as stipulated by the Board of Directors for the Chairman of the Management Board and Management Board members (50% bonus) and personal performance indicators set for each Management Board member (50% bonus). Performance indicators include both financial and production indicators.
Efforts to mitigate corruption risk and minimize damage from corrupt actionsThe Company seeks to prevent and reveal corrupt practic-es. If any violations are identified, the Company carries out internal investigations, develops and implements measures to eliminate and prevent problems and applies disciplinary measures toward employees who are guilty under the ap-plicable law.In 2011, the Company opened a confidential hotline via which individuals can contact the Internal Audit and Risk Management Unit, if any corrupt practices are identified.The Company has carried out a complete inspection of affili-ations between JSC RusHydro’s executives and their coun-terparties; developed an Integrated Program on Fraud Pre-vention and Corruption, which involves efforts to mitigate the risks of corrupt practices and prepared several internal documents to prevent corruption:• Regulations on Disclosing Information on Income, Property
and Property Obligations by RusHydro’s Employees;• Regulations on Notifying the Employer (JSC RusHydro) of
any Facts Related to Soliciting RusHydro’s Employees to Commit Illegal Activities;
• Regulations on Disclosing Information on Gifts Received by RusHydro’s Employees in Relation to Protocol Events, Business Trips and other Official Events;
• Regulation on Preventing and Settling Conflicts of Interest in JSC RusHydro;
• Rules to Review Calls Received on JSC RusHydro’s Confidential Hotline.
The Board of Directors approved amendments to the Com-pany’s internal documents regulating procurement. The amendments enabled the Company to reduce the prob-ability of violations by eliminating gaps in regulation and procurement control. The management team pursues a policy of supporting high conduct standards to be followed by the Company’s em-ployees.
Efforts to prevent the use of insider informationIn 2011, the Company approved the Regulation on Insider Information aimed at complying with Russian laws concern-ing preventing the use of insider information and market abuse. The regulation defines categories of persons which the Company qualifies as insiders and restrictions on the use of insider information to carry out transactions with the Company’s financial instruments, as well as the disclosure of said information to third parties.Inspector of JSC RusHydro’s is responsible for supervising compliance with insider information laws. The Inspector reports to the Audit Committee on a quarterly basis. The Audit Committee includes information on fulfilling such re-quirements by the Company in its reports, subject to ap-proval by the Board of Directors.
92
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
The Company manages its SDCs via its representatives at General Meetings of Shareholders, Board of Directors meet-ings and audit bodies of these entities in accordance with the Articles of Association and the Rules of relationships with companies in which JSC RusHydro participates.Responsibility for making any management decisions relat-ed to SDCs falls under the competence of the Management Board, except for decisions on strategic matters, such as re-organization, liquidation, changes in charter capital, ap-proval of large-scale transactions and participation in other organizations.JSC RusHydro is committed to upgrading the corporate management level for its SDCs, in particular, it seeks to enhance transparency and ensure their compliance with Russian federal laws on mandatory information disclosure.
The total remuneration and compensation payable to the Chairman of the Management Board and Management Board members was 1,012,439,661.18 rubles. No remuneration was paid to top managers of JSC RusHy-dro for 3Q and 4Q of 2009 and for 2009 during 2010 by the decision of the Board of Directors made in the context of the Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP accident on August 17, 2009. In 2011, the Company paid full remuneration for 2010 with a view to meeting the key performance indicators of the Company.
The Audit CommissionMembers of the Audit Commission are paid lump-sum re-muneration in accordance with the Regulations on Remu-neration and Compensation to Members of JSC RusHydro’s Audit Commission.The remuneration is equal to twenty-five minimal grade one monthly rates established by the tariff agreement ap-plicable to the Russian energy industry for the period of the audit, including indexation set forth in the Agreement. Remuneration payable to the Chairman of the Audit Com-mission is increased 50%.No remuneration and compensation are paid to Audit Com-mission members restricted from receiving any payments from commercial organizations by Russian federal law. No remuneration was paid to Audit Commission members in 2011, as all members were government officers.
External AuditorIn 2011, remuneration paid to JSC HLB Vneshaudit for au-diting the Company’s financial statement and accounting reports under Russian Accounting Standards was approved by the Board of Directors at 14,950,000 rubles including VAT.
SDCs MANAGEMENTJSC RusHydro participates in the charter capital of com-panies involved in design, construction, maintenance and repairs, technical upgrading and renovation of power facili-ties, as well as in energy generation and supply.The Company’s relationships with its SDCs are focused on implementing strategy, ensuring sustainable economic growth and investment appeal and protecting the rights and interests of shareholders of the Company and its affili-ated entities.
93
annual report / 2011
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Number of ordinary and preferred shares transferred
RusHydro’s stake in the charter capital of the Company before exercising its pre-emptive right, %
RusHydro’s stake in the charter capital of the Company after exercising its pre-emptive right, %
RAO ES of the East 29,886,902,719 0 69.3160*
Far East Energy Company 178,714,322 0 1.0376
Sakhalin Energy Company 1,029,000 0 17.7723
Yakutskenergo 2,769,811,893 0 29.7951
TRUST Hydromontazh 127,054,147 0 33.5429
Geo-therm 6,300,000 79.8423 92.7972
Kolymaenergo 4,212,199,965 64.2746 98.7597
Ust-Srednekanskaya HPP 5,642,166,600 3.64 35.3134
KamGEK 1,187,917,534 0 96.5835
Pavlodolskaya HPP 380,900 0 100
Boguchanskaya HPP 181,520,990 0 2.8860
Zamagarskaya HPP 77,000 5.4579 98.3467
Irkutskenergo 672,258 0 0.0141
2011 CHANGES IN THE HOLDING STRUCTUREIn 2011, RusHydro Holding made some changes in its struc-ture by acquiring or terminating its participation in SDCs.The key 2011 transaction involved consolidating Far Eastern energy assets. JSC RusHydro acquired a controlling stake in RAO ES of the East and became a major player on the Far Eastern energy market. This acquisition is in line with the Company’s growth strategy to consolidate underesti-
mated Russian generating assets and create added value via a synergy of the Holding’s existing generating, supply, construction and project assets. The above-mentioned assets are included in RusHydro’s charter capital in accordance with Russian Government Or-der No. 2461-p (of December 29, 2010). The Russian Fed-eration participated in the additional issue of the Company’s shares by exercising its pre-emptive right for additional shares in the Company.
* Shown as the percentage from the charter capital as of 31.12.2011After completion of the additional share issue (07.02.2012) the share of JSC RusHydro is 65.75%
94
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKETCHARTER CAPITALOn December 31st, 2011, the Company’s charter capital stood at 290,302,702,379 rubles divided into 290,302,702,379 ordinary registered non-documentary shares with a par val-ue of 1 ruble per share. According to the Company’s Articles of Association, the number of authorized ordinary shares is 100,000,000,000. The Company has issued no preferred shares.
During the last five years, the Company’s charter capital has increased each year through the issuing of additional ordi-nary shares. As a result, since the Company’s founding, its charter capital has tripled. Funds raised via the placement of shares were used to finance the Company’s large-scale investment program. In 2008, charter capital increased by converting shares of companies that had merged with the Company.All issues of the Company’s registered shares are united as a single issue under State registration number 1-01-55038-Е.
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
Company provided its shareholders with the pre-emptive right to purchase the additionally issued shares first. The pre-emptive right amounted to the placement of 1 billion additional shares, constituting 55.8 % of the total issue. The largest buyer was the State, which purchased an ad-ditional 1.5 billion rubles in shares. This financed the resto-
Changes in the Company’s Articles of Association, resulting from an increase in charter capital due to the placement of the additional share issue under State registration number 1-01-55038-Е-039D, were registered in May 2011. A deci-sion to carry out the share issue was made at the Extraor-dinary General Shareholders Meeting in October 2010. The
1-01-55038-Е-039D* 1-01-55038-Е-040D
Decision date for increasing charter capital
22.10.2010 30.06.2011
State registration date for the issue 02.12.2010 16.08.2011
The total issue value (in nominal terms), rubles
1,860,000,000 89,000,000,000
Share category (type) Ordinary registered Ordinary registered
Placement method Open subscription Open subscription
Payment method Monetary funds Monetary and non-monetary funds
Single share placement price 1 ruble 61 kopecks • 1 ruble 65 kopecks• The evaluation was approved by the Board of Directors based on an independent appraiser’s report
Placement start date 23.12.2010 05.09.2011
Placement end date 29.03.2011 **
Number of shares placed in nominal value, rubles
1,607,271,577 **
Funds attracted, rubles 2,587,707,238.97 **
* Code 039D was cancelled on 02.08.2011** The placement is not complete as of 31.12.2011
INFORMATION ON ADDITIONAL SHARES ISSUED IN 2011
95
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
ration of the Baksanskaya HPP following a terrorist attack. The total issue was for 1.6 billion additional shares, attract-ing 2.6 billion rubles in funds.At the General Shareholders Meeting held in June 2011, a decision was made to increase the Company’s charter capital by 89 billion rubles. The increase was designed to consolidate hydro-energy assets and finance construc-tion of the Gotsatlinskaya HPP in Dagestan. The additional share issue was registered by the State under the number 1-01-55038-Е-040D. The Company provided its sharehol-
Registered entity Type of registered entity
Number of shares
% of issued shares
% of placed shares
The Russian Federation, as represented by the Federal Agency for State Property Management
Owner 191,247,357,990 50.42 60.38
“ING BANK (EURASIA)” (CLOSED JOINT STOCK COMPANY)
Nominee shareholder
41,244,765,840 10.87 13.02
“Natsionalny Raschetny Depositariy” (National Settlement Depository) Closed Joint Stock Company, a non-banking credit organization
Nominee shareholder
28,652,443,433 7.55 9.05
“Depositarno-Kliringovaya Kompaniya” (Depositary and Clearing Company) Closed Joint Stock Company
Nominee shareholder
24,067,084,453 6.35 7.60
“Depositarnye i Korporativnye Technologii” (Depositary and Corporate Technologies) Limited Liability Company
Nominee shareholder
15,563,297,487 4.10 4.91
LIST OF REGISTERED ENTITIES FOR WHICH PERSONAL ACCOUNTS ACCOUNT FOR MORE THAN 2% OF SHARES, AS OF 31.12.2011
ders with the pre-emptive right to purchase additionally is-sued shares first. As a result of the issue, the Company purchased shares in Far Eastern companies and the Angara dam. In total, the issue attracted 3.2 billion rubles, of this amount, 3.1 billion rubles were paid by the Company’s ma-jority shareholder, the Russian Federation to be spent on completing the Gotsatlinskaya HPP. The State contributed property with a total value of 43.6 billion rubles. As of De-cember 31st, 2011, the additional share placement was not complete.
96
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
the Company was listed in 2008, the Company’s shares have become “blue chip” securities on the Russian market, and are among the most liquid traded securities. The shares have been included in MICEX and RTS indices, the MICEX Large Cap and MICEX Mid Cap capitalization indices, MICEX PWR and RTSeu sector indices, as well as into the follow-ing foreign indices: MSCI Russian, MSCI Emerging Market and MSCI Global Value and Growth (which are calculated by Morgan Stanley Capital International Inc.).
CIRCULATION OF THE COMPANY SECURITIES ON THE RUSSIAN MARKETThe Company’s securities circulate on the main trading floor of the Russian stock exchange, namely CJSC FB MMVB (MICEX Stock Exchange); the Company is a member of JSC MMVB-RTS Group (MICEX-RTS). The Company’s shares are traded in three sectors – Main, Standard and Classica. Since
CHARTER CAPITAL ALLOCATION, AS OF 31.12.2011
• * 2010 data correspond to the following trading modes in effect before the integration of the two stock exchanges, CJSC FB MMVB and JSC RTS: • The Main Market – MMVB (MICEX) stock market;• Standard – RTS Standard stock market;• Classica – RTS classic market
Source: JSC Registrar R.O.S.T.Information provided takes into account the incomplete share issue as of 31.12.2011
The Russian Federation
Entities
Physical persons
Shares on the Company`s issuer account
.
16.5%1.8%
31.3%50.4%
Main Market Standard Classica
2010 2011 2010 2011 2010 2011
Ticker symbol HYDR HYDRS HYDR
Transaction currency RUR RUR USD
Maximum transaction price 1,820 1,705 1,827 1,703 0.062 0.0562
Minimum transaction price 1,182 0.9559 1,184 0.958 0.039 0.03
Year end transaction price 1,649 0.9658 1,648 0.968 0.054 0.03
Share trading volume 251 bln. 190 bln. 18 bln. 4 bln. 41 bln. 2.8 mln.
TRADING IN THE COMPANY’S SHARES ON THE STOCK MARKET
97
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
THE COMPANY’S 2011 SHARE PERFORMANCE (HYDR) COMPARED WITH MICEX AND MICEXPWR INDICES
THE COMPANY’S 2011 SHARE PERFORMANCE AND TRADING VOLUME ON THE MICEX MAIN MARKET
Source: MICEX-RTS data (http://rts.micex.ru/)
Source: MICEX-RTS data (http://rts.micex.ru/)
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
Share trading volume, RUR million Last transaction price, RUR
Janu
ary
Febr
uary
Mar
ch
Apr
il
May
June
July
Augu
st
Sep
tem
ber
Oct
ober
Nov
embe
r
Dec
embe
r
120%
110%
100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
HYDR–41%
MICEX–17%
MICEX PWR –40%
Janu
ary
Febr
uary
Mar
ch
Apr
il
May
June
July
Aug
ust
Sep
tem
ber
Oct
ober
Nov
embe
r
Dec
embe
r
98
annual report / 2011
Vladimir Putin. These comments were directed at the heads of some domestic power sector companies.On the whole, during 2011, the dynamics of the Company’s stock value corresponded closely with other power sector companies. This can be explained by limitations in tariff growth and the exclusion of the target investment compo-nent from the Company’s tariff formation mechanism.Despite the negative factors listed above, the Company’s securities provide one of the most promising long-term in-vestment opportunities in the power sector.
CIRCULATION OF THE COMPANY’S SECURITIES ON INTERNATIONAL MARKETSThe Company launched a depositary receipts program for ordinary shares. On December 31st, 2011, the Company issued 327,435,504 Level 1 American Depositary Receipts (ADRs) and 3,578,226 Global Depositary Receipts (GDR) according to Rule 144А for 33,101,373,000 ordinary shares which make 10.45 % of the total amount of the Company’s ordinary shares.
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
Throughout 2011, the value of the MICEX index, Russia’s principal stock market indicator, was influenced by external factors, including: debt problems in Euro-region countries and the decision of Standard & Poor’s to downgrade the United States’ sovereign credit rating. The latter factor re-sulted in the failure of the Russian market to win its po-sition back in H2 2011. Despite high sustained oil prices throughout the reporting year, foreign investors preferred to take their capital out of Russia. These trends affected all developing markets, including Russia. Compared to 2010, the MICEX index lost 17%.Shares of power sector companies underperformed the market during 2011. Compared to 2010, the MICEX PWR index declined 40%. Capitalization of power sector compa-nies fell due to factors including the decision of the Russian government to limit energy price growth. The decision was made in response to the fact that investors started to form expectations taking into consideration a future decline in revenues for power sector companies, resulting in a reduc-tion in programs to upgrade depreciated assets and an in-crease in their debt burden. A further decline in the capitali-zation of power sector companies in December 2011 can be attributed to critical comments by Russian Prime Minister
DEPOSITARY RECEIPT PROGRAM STAGES
AUGUST2009
Launch of ADR Level 1 Program and conversion of the GDR Program into ADR
Program, according to Provision S
AUGUST2010
Launch of depositary receipts on the OTCOX
(USA) in the International Premier segment of the
unlisted market
JUNE2008
Launch of GDR Program, according to Rule 144A
JULY2009
Launch of GDR trading on the London Stock
Exchange (LSE) in the International Order Book
sector
99
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
DESCRIPTION OF THE DEPOSITARY RECEIPT PROGRAM
RESULTS OF DEPOSITARY RECEIPT TRADING ON THE LSE
Program type
Program launch date
Depositary bank
Ratio Ticker symbol
CUSIP number
Maximum volume of the program, in shares
Trading floor(s)
GDR according to Rule 144А
June 17th, 2008
The Bank of New York Mellon
1 GDR = 100 ordinary shares
HYDR
466294204
832,131,000
London Stock Exchange (Main Market – IOB)
ADR Level 1 August 7th, 2009
1 ADR = 100 ordinary shares
466294105 OTCQX International PremierPortal
2010 2011
Ticker symbol HYDR
Transaction currency USD
Maximum transaction price 6.26 5.69
Minimum transaction price 3.94 3.00
Year end transaction price 5.45 3.05
Trading volume 2 billion 513 million
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
18,000,00016,000,00014,000,00012,000,00010,000,0008,000,0006,000,0004,000,0002,000,0000
Trading volume, ths USD Closing price, USD
Dec
embe
r
Janu
ary
Febr
uary
Mar
ch
Apr
il
May
June
July
Augu
st
Sep
tem
ber
Oct
ober
Nov
embe
r
THE COMPANY’S 2011 ADR PERFORMANCE AND TRADING VOLUME ON LSE (IOB)
100
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
Analyzing the structure of holders of the Company’s deposi-tary receipts indicates that the majority of investors sup-port the “Value” investment strategy. The strategy in ques-tion is geared toward investing in securities of companies that have stable finances and good growth in profits, but that are underestimated by the market.The majority of the Company’s depositary receipts are held by investors from the United States and Great Britain.
Value
Deep Value
Growth
Index
Other
.
23%6%8%
21%
42%
Creat Britain
Germany
Sweden
Austria
Switzerland
Other European countries
Japan
Other Asian countries
USA and other North American countries
.
6%6%7%
7%
16%
25%
24%8%2%
DISTRIBUTION OF ADR HOLDERS
PER INVESTMENT STRATEGY
PER REGION
101
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
DIVIDEND POLICYThe Company’s dividend policy is intended to ensure the strategic development of JSC RusHydro and growth in shareholder value, by creating an optimal balance between dividend payments to shareholders and earning capitaliza-tion.
Reporting period subject to dividend payment Total amount of declared (accrued) dividends, RUR thousand
Declared dividends per share, RUR
9M 2005 27,889 0.000268289
2005 565,695 0.005441922
Q1 2006 223,600 0.002151
H1 2006 110,588 0.00106384
9M 2006 809,000 0.005739439
Q1 2007 1,119,000 0.00793872
2010 2,496,867 0.00860091
To ensure transparency in determining the amount of divi-dends and dividend payments, the Company adopted its own Dividend Policy. Based on this Policy, annual dividends paid by the Company must be at least 5% of net profit. The Company may also decide to pay dividends on interim results.
DIVIDEND HISTORY
Report on declared (accrued) dividend payment on Company’s shares in 2010 The total amount of paid dividend was RUR 2,491,906 thou-sand or 99.8% of the declared dividends. Payments have been made in full to the persons registered in the register of shareholders, except for RUR 4,960 thousand (0.2% of the declared dividend amount) due to reasons beyond Com-
pany’s control: the shareholders failed to duly notify the register holder on the change in their details or specified incorrect details for dividend payment. The Company has fully performed its obligations to transfer dividends of RUR 1,447,343 thousand to the federal budg-et. The Company has no outstanding debt on dividend pay-ment to the federal budget.
102
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
Series 01 Series 02
State registration number 4-01-55038-E 4-02-55038-E
Registration date 23.09.2010 23.09.2010
Bond type Documentary interest-bearing, non-convertible, with mandatory centralized deposit
Documentary interest-bearing, non-convertible, with mandatory centralized deposit
Nominal value 1,000 rubles 1,000 rubles
Nominal volume of the issue 10 billion rubles 10 billion rubles
Nominal volume in circulation 10 billion rubles 5 billion rubles
Placement price 100% 100%
Placement method Open subscription, book building Open subscription, book building
Placement date 25.04.2011 Start date: 25.04.2011 End date: 05.05.2011
Coupon 1-10 coupons – 8%, 11-20 – as determined by the issuer
1-10 coupons – 8%, 11-20 – as determined by the issuer
Coupon payment period Twice a year Twice a year
Yield on the initial offer 8.16% 8.16%
Put-option 22.04.2016, type – put, price – 100% 22.04.2016, type – put, price – 100%
Maturity date 12.04.2021 12.04.2021
In August 2011, the Company decided to attract debt funds in an amount up to 40 billion rubles to finance operating and investment activities. The funds will be attracted by is-suing bonds. Registration of Series 03, 04, 05 and 05 bonds by the State was performed in October. A decision on issue placement will be made by the Company based on market conditions and the Company’s demand for debt financing in 2012.
BONDSAfter the successful placement of ruble-denominated eu-robonds in 2010, the Company continued using public fi-nancing sources in 2011. In April, the Company completed the placement of two issues of Series 01 and 02 bonds in
the amount of 15 billion rubles. The bonds were a big suc-cess with investors and are included in MICEX’s “A”, 1st level quotation list. Funds attracted as a result of the placement were used by the Company to finance investment activities and to partially re-finance JSC MC HydroOGK’s bond in June 2011.
KEY BOND ISSUE PARAMETERS
103
annual report / 2011
THE COMPANY ON THE SECURITIES MARKET
Issue parameters
Issuing company Rushydro Finance Ltd. (Ireland)
Ultimate borrower JSC RusHydro
Type of securities Eurobonds (LPN Notes, Eurobond convention)
Volume 20 billion rubles
Period 5 years
Coupon rate 7.875% per annum
Issue rating S&P: BB+ / Moody’s: Ba1 / Fitch: BB+
Listing London Stock Exchange (LSE)
Regulating law English law
BASIC EURO BOND PARAMETERS
INVESTOR RELATIONSThe Company is traditionally focused on relationships with the investment community, adhering to principles of open-ness and information disclosure. Responsibility for active relationships with investors is borne by the Company’s IR Division.In a timely manner, the Company discloses all information (in both Russian and English) that may influence investors’ decision-making. One of the Company’s main communica-tion channels is the corporate web site www.rushydro.ru. The web site contains complete and up-to-date corporate information.During the year, Company representatives participated in more than 20 road shows and investment conferences.According to a 2010 survey of investment funds carried out by THOMSOM-REUTERS EXTEL SURVEYS in 2011, JSC RusHydro’s IR team became the best in its class for Russian power sector companies.
2 0 1 12 0 1 1
2 0 1 1
an
nu
al
rep
ort
RusHydro5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
CONTACTS
BRANCHES
GLOSSARY
APPENDICES
106
annual report / 2011
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
PERSONNEL STRUCTURE
by age by categories
by education
As of December 31st, 2011 the Company had headcount of 6,014 people. In 2011, the number of its employees grew by 5%, driven by the Company’s asset acquisitions and ef-forts to form management structures for them.
PERSONNELThe cornerstone of the Company’s HR policy is the under-standing that its key asset is its employees. RusHydro cares about making sure that its personnel perceive their pro-fessional achievements as a contribution to the Company’s growth and overall success.
Under 25
25 — 35
35 — 45
45 and over
.25%
5%
30%
40%
Executives
Office personnel
Workers
Specialists
. 1%
23%
36%
40%
Secondary (full)
Basic general
Initial professional
Secondary professional
Higher
.
12%1%5%
15%67%
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
107
annual report / 2011
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
by age
by categories
PERSONNEL STRUCTURE
01.01.200901.01.2008 01.01.2010 01.01.2011 01.01.2012
36.4%
26.8%
23.5% 25.1% 26.1% 26.3% 25.3%
26.2% 26.6% 27.9% 29.7%
36.1% 35.3% 35.3% 34.3%
4.3%4.6%5.1%
8.2% 8.0% 7.7%6.4% 6.1%
4.2% 4.6%
40%
35%
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%
0
Under 25
25–35
35–45
From 45 to retirement age
Employed pensioners
01.01.200901.01.2008 01.01.2010 01.01.2011 01.01.2012
45%
40%
35%
30%
25%
20%
43.6% 42.8%38.7% 40.2% 41.1%
23.9%22.8%23.5%33.0% 34.4%
37.4% 36.3% 35.5%
23.6% 23.4%
Specialists and other office personnel
Workers
Executives
108
annual report / 2011
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
rate environment promoting effective performance for the Company’s young employees.In 2011, the Company organized educational seminars for school students, helping them to make better use of teach-ing materials for lessons dedicated to hydropower. RusHy-dro also created Secrets of Water – animated textbooks about hydro power, organized the first industry-focused Ol-ympiad among school students, called The Energy of Edu-cation, created “energy classes” in the Company’s regions of presence, and unveiling a unique educational project to introduce school students to the environment of engi-neering and technical creativity – the Sayanskaya Summer School.The Company continued its cooperation with the Sayano-Shushenskaya branch of the Siberian Federal University. RusHydro offers students exciting subjects to explore in their graduation papers, along with student internship and further employment opportunities. The Company’s repre-sentatives are annually involved in the branch’s state exam and attestation committees.
DEVELOPING HUMAN RESOURCE POTENTIALOne of the Company’s strategic priorities is growing and de-veloping its human resource potential to successfully meet its current and future targets, aims and objectives.The Company has the Fast-Track Human Resource Devel-opment Concept – From New School to Workplace – and its Implementation Program. The Program’s key task is to promote engineering education, enhance the prestige of technical occupations, and build an environment helping to cover RusHydro’s need for well-trained professionals for them to later operate the Company’s existing and planned capacity, ensuring their reliable undisrupted performance.As part of the Program, the Company has target projects underway to develop key competencies for future hydro-power professionals starting from elementary school, ac-tivities aimed at offering guidance for middle and high school students, energy power training for students based on RusHydro’s requirements, and efforts to create a corpo-
01.01.200901.01.2008 01.01.2010 01.01.2011 01.01.2012
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0
23.0% 22.5%19.6% 18.1% 16.8%
52.3%55.7%
60.4%64.2% 66.8%
1.0%1.7%2.2%
22.5%20.2% 19.0% 16.8% 15.5%
0.9% 0.8%
Initial basic
Secondary professional
Secondary
Higher
by education
Over the past four years, the Company has enjoyed a rather stable personnel structure, with a trend to employ younger and more highly qualified professionals.
109
annual report / 2011
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Program on an annual basis, making sure it includes a num-ber of retirement plans aimed at creating additional retire-ment savings for eligible groups. In 2011, additional ratios were introduced to encourage timely retirements among employees, helping to reduce the number of employed pen-sioners, simplify rotation and revitalization of the team.
Voluntary health insurance and voluntary accident and illness insuranceThe Company annually revises and signs agreements for voluntary health insurance and voluntary accident and ill-ness insurance to expand and upgrade the list of medical services available to employees. The program covers 100% of the Company’s workforce. Under voluntary health insur-ance coverage, employees take advantage of out-patient medical treatment (including home visits by doctors), ur-gent and non-urgent medical care and rehabilitation thera-py services, healthcare services abroad, etc. The Company also aims to provide best value offers of voluntary health insurance for its personnel’s families.
Housing programSince 2007, the Company has been implementing the Em-ployee Housing Improvement Program, which is open for young employees below the age of 30 who do not own a separate residential property, professionals who were of-fered branch positions and relocated from a different place, and key and highly skilled professionals. The Company’s corporate support is provided through purpose interest-free loans, compensation for interests paid on home mortgages, and compensation for housing rental expenses.Additionally, all Company employees can access corporate support to upgrade their housing, taking advantage of as-sistance in their contacts with banks, real estate agencies and insurance companies to get better than average market deals (with lower mortgage interest rates, better loan con-sideration timing, competitive insurance rates, etc.).In 2011, the Company has allocated a total of 1,218 million rubles to its social policy improvement.
CHARITYRusHydro is fully involved in the economic and social as-pects of life in the regions in which it is present. For this purpose, the Company adopted a charitable program aimed at educating a new generation of professional power engi-neers and establishing a favorable social environment in all regions in which the Company has HPPs. In line with the approved Concept of Charity and Spon-sorship, the Company allocates funds to the following purposes:• assist poor and needy persons, the disabled and
pensioners, primarily through charitable funds and organizations;
The Company cares about creating and growing dynasties of hydropower engineers and enhancing the prestige of engineering as an occupation. To do that, the Company approved the payment and compensation procedure for children of employees of RusHydro’s branches provided that they are pursuing degrees matching the Company’s business.The Company has an ongoing employee training system, helping to grow the competencies of its personnel in line with their job requirements and to rotate and transfer em-ployees as part of developing a succession pool of candi-dates. Wide opportunities for professional growth of the personnel are offered by a new IT-based chain of Training and Industrial Centers, including those featuring equip-ment simulators. Another option is close cooperation with profile institutions in the system of higher and vocational education.RusHydro signed a strategic partnership agreement with the Moscow Power Engineering Institute. To develop train-ing programs for occupations required by the Company, agreements with facilities of vocational training have been signed.In 2011, the Company allocated a total of 123 million rubles to developing its human resource potential.
SOCIAL POLICYCaring about the well-being and social protection of its em-ployees and their families is one of RusHydro’s priorities. At each of its branches, the Company has a collective agree-ment in place. RusHydro offers its staff a strong social pack-age, making sure RusHydro remains an attractive competi-tive employer.A special focus in the Company’s social policy is recruiting young professionals with strong academic results in power engineering. Qualified personnel retention and employee incentivizing is also important for RusHydro.The Company supports young families, mothers and chil-dren, raising the one-off entitlement to new (foster) par-ents by 50% in 2011. In the same year, the Company also revised and optimized the schemes it used in a number of its social programs, including recreational treatment and tourist leisure allowances for its employees and families.
Non-state pension coverageThe Company strives to develop non-state pension cov-erage (NPC) for its employees. Providing employees with competitive retirement benefits will help the Company bet-ter forecast and manage workforce needs based on a speci-fied skill set, while also allowing the Company to recruit new employees in a timely manner for soon to be vacant posts and to revitalize the team.As a socially responsible team, RusHydro improves its NPC
110
annual report / 2011
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
• help retired power engineers and workers and honored industry workers;
• aid children’s organizations and institutions;• assist medical institutions and healthcare organizations;• promote the restoration of Russia’s historical and
architectural monuments and the development of culture, education, science and sport.
The “Sail of Hope”, a charity program implemented by the Company, won the Corporate Charity Leaders 2011, an all-Russian competition, as the Best Program Helping Local Community Growth and Social Climate Improvement in the Company’s Region of Presence.
In 2011, RusHydro allocated 915 million rubles to its chari-table and sponsorship activities, including 182 million ru-bles to the “Sail of Hope” program.
BLOCK 3
Minimize environmental impact and meet corporate
targets
BLOCK 4
Prevent and eliminate emergencies (their
environmental implications)
BLOCK 1
Establish the Company's branch as a socially responsible and
envrionmentally friendly business
BLOCK 2
Introduce management systems compliant with
ISO and OHSAS
BLOCK 5
Analyze results of environmental
protection efforts
SAFETY AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTIONRusHydro is one of Russia’s largest electricity producer that provides consumers with highly effective environmentally friendly energy from renewable sources.
To meet its environmental protection targets, the Company has the 2011-2013 Environmental Policy Program, which involves efforts to minimize negative environmental foot-print and contains five key blocks:
111
annual report / 2011
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
The Company complies with statutory environmental regu-lations in place and helps Russia to meet obligations stipu-lated by international environmental protection conventions signed by the country, aiming to constantly reduce environ-mental impact and prevent pollution.The Company has environmental monitoring across its fa-cilities, usually carried out by federal state-run agencies (Center for Laboratory Analysis and Technical Measure-ments, Agency of the Federal Service for Hydrometeorology and Environmental Monitoring), as well as dedicated cent-ers and laboratories of HPPs. Additionally, the Company’s construction sites use procedures to track the social and environmental condition of the facility’s influence. The main blocks of the monitoring scope are hydrochemical, ichthyo-logic, soil and vegetation, plant, forest, zoological and social tracking.
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND THE CORPORATE SUSTAINABILITY REPORTTo provide more details about RusHydro’s sustainable development, the Company has been publishing its Social Responsibility and Corporate Sustainability Reports, covering the most notable achievements of the Company in its economic, environmental and social efforts.
112
annual report / 2011
CONTACTS
CONTACTSFull name: Open Joint Stock Company
Federal Hydro-generating Company RusHydro
Name in English: JSC RusHydro
Location: 51 Respubliki Street, Krasnoyarsk, the Krasnoyarsk Region, Russia, 660075
Mailing address: 51 Arkhitektora Vlasova Street, Moscow, Russia, 117393
Telephone: +7 (495) 225-3232
Fax: +7 (495) 225-3737
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet address in Russian: www.rushydro.ru
Internet address in English: www.eng.rushydro.ru
Bank Details
Current account: 40702810800205771190
Bank: JSC JSCB EUROFINANCE MOSNARBANK, Moscow
BIC: 044525204
Correspondence account: 30101810900000000204
Shareholder relations
Hotline Telephone 8 (800)555-9997
(free for residents of all Russian regions) [email protected]
Electronic mail: [email protected]
Corporate Governance Department: Maxim Valentinovich Zavalko
Telephone/Fax: +7 (495) 225-3232/225-3737
E-mail: [email protected]
Registrar
Full name: Open Joint Stock Company Registrar R.O.S.T.
Abbreviated name: JSC Registrar R.O.S.T.
Location: 13, building 18, Stromynka Street, Moscow
Mailing address: P.O. Box 9, 18 Stromynka Street, Moscow, Russia, 107996
Telephone: +7 (495) 771-7335
Fax: +7 (495) 771-7334
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet address: www.rrost.ru
License No.: 10-000-1-00264 as of December 3rd, 2002
Investor relations
IR Department: Alexander Yevgenyevich Goldin
Telephone/Fax: +7 (495) 225-3232/225-3737
E-mail: [email protected]
IR Department: Maxim Grigoryevich Novikov
Telephone/Fax: +7 (495) 225-3232, ext.1394/ +7 (495) 225-3237
E-mail: [email protected]
113
annual report / 2011
CONTACTS
Media relations
Press Secretary Yelena Gennadyevna Vishnyakova
Telephone: +7 (495) 225-3232, ext. 1099
E-mail: [email protected]
Depositary Bank
Full name: The Bank of New York Mellon
ADR EEMEA REL MGMT NY Vladimir Kotlikov
Telephone: +1 (212) 815-5948
Fax: +1 (212) 571-3050
E-mail: [email protected]
ADR EEMEA REL MGMT NY Azat Nugumanov
Telephone: +1 (212) 815-2570
Fax: +1 (732) 667-4575
E-mail: [email protected]
Issuer Services Mark Lewis
Telephone: +44 0207964-6089
Fax: +44 0207964-6427
E-mail: [email protected]
ADR BROKER MARKETING Michael Ludwig
Telephone: +1 (212) 815-2275
Fax: +1 (212) 815-3004
E-mail: [email protected]
Issuer Services: Ian A. Pledger
Telephone: +44 020 7964-6083
Fax: +44 020 7964-6427
E-mail: [email protected]
Auditor
Full name: Closed Joint Stock Company HLB Vneshaudit
Abbreviated name: JSC HLB Vneshaudit
Location: 25-27/2 Bolshaya Yakimanka Street, Moscow, Russia, 109180
Mailing address: Office 701, Entrance 3, 12 Krasnopresnenskaya Embankment, Moscow, Russia, 123610
Telephone: +7 (495) 967-0495
Fax: +7 (495) 967-0497
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet address: www.vneshaudit.ru
114
annual report / 2011
BRANCHES
Branch Name Location and Contact Information
The Bureyskaya HPP Branch Talakan, the Bureysky District, the Amur Region, RussiaTelephone +(7) 41634 5 23 [email protected]://www.burges.rushydro.ru/
The Volzhskaya HPP Branch 1a Lenina Prospect, Volzhsky, the Volgograd Region, RussiaTelephone +(7) 8443 34 13 [email protected]://www.volges.rushydro.ru/
The Votkinskaya HPP Branch Chaykovsky, the Perm Region, RussiaTelephone +(7) 34241 7 03 [email protected]://www.votges.rushydro.ru/
The Dagestan Branch 5 M, Khalilova Street, Kaspyisk, the Republic of Dagestan, RussiaTelephone: +(7) 8722 55 06 [email protected]://www.dagestan.rushydro.ru/
The Zhigulevskaya HPP Branch Zhigulevsk, the Samara Region, RussiaTelephone: +(7) 84862 7 93 [email protected]://www.zhiges.rushydro.ru/
The Zagorskaya PSHPP Branch 100 Bogorodskoye, the Sergiev-Posad District, the Moscow Region, RussiaTelephone: +(7) 495 957 26 52+(7) 49654 5 35 [email protected]://www.zagaes.rushydro.ru/
The Zeyskaya HPP Branch Zeya, the Amur Region, RussiaTelephone: +(7) 41658 2 45 [email protected]://www.zges.rushydro.ru/
Irganaiskaya HPP Branch* Shamilkala, the Untsukulskiy District, the Republic of Dagestan, Russia
The Kabardino-Balkarian Branch
9th kilometer, the Nartan Railway Station, the Kabardino-Balkar Republic, RussiaTelephone: +(7) 8662 77 94 [email protected]://www.kbf.rushydro.ru/
BRANCHES
* On February 29, 2012, the Board of Directors made a decision on Irganayskaya HPP liquidation (Minutes No. 144 of March 1, 2012).
115
annual report / 2011
BRANCHES
Branch Name Location and Contact Information
The Kamskaya HPP Branch The Kamskaya HPP, Perm, Russia Telephone: +(7) 342 273 46 84 [email protected] http://www.kamges.rushydro.ru/
The Karachaevo-Cherkessian Branch
Pravo-Kubansky, the Karachai-Cherkess Republic, Russia Telephone: +(7) 8782 26 70 40 [email protected] http://www.kchf.rushydro.ru/
The Cascade of the Verkhnevolzhskiye HPPs Branch
Rybinsk, the Yaroslavl Region, Russia Telephone: +(7) 4855 29 74 59 [email protected] http://www.kvvges.rushydro.ru/
The Cascade of the Kubanskiye HPPs Branch
360a, Vodoprovodnaya Street, Nevinnomyssk, the Stavropol Region, Russia Telephone: +(7) 86554 6 80 01 [email protected] http://www.kkges.rushydro.ru/
The Corporate Hydro-Power University Branch
8a Vernadsky Prospect, Moscow, Russia Telephone: +(7) 495 540 30 12, ext. 4008 [email protected] http://www.korung.rushydro.ru/
The Nizhegorodskaya HPP Branch
14 Privokzalnaya Street, Zavolzhye, the Gorodetsky District, the Nizhny Novgorod Region, Russia Telephone: +(7) 83161 7 96 79 [email protected] http://www.nizhges.rushydro.ru/
The Novosibirskaya HPP Branch
4 Novomorskaya Street, Novosibirsk, Russia Telephone: +(7) 383 345 95 55 [email protected], [email protected] http://www.nges.rushydro.ru/
The Saratovskaya HPP Branch Balakovo, the Saratov Region, Russia Telephone: +(7) 8453 44 20 65 [email protected] http://www.sarges.rushydro.ru/
The Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP named after P.S. Neporozhniy Branch
Cheremushki, Sayanogorsk, the Republic of Khakassia, Russia Telephone: +(7) 39042 3 26 27 [email protected] http://www.sshges.rushydro.ru/
The Northern Ossetian Branch 63 Vaso Abayev Street, Vladikavkaz, the Republic of North Ossetia – Alania, Russia Telephone: +(7) 8672 53 66 34 [email protected] http://www.osetia.rushydro.ru/
The Cheboksarskaya HPP Branch
34 Naberezhnaya Street, Novocheboksarsk, the Chuvash Republic, Russia Telephone: +(7) 8352 73 75 06 [email protected] http://www.cheges.rushydro.ru/
116
annual report / 2011
GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
Company JSC RusHydro, including its branches and representative offices
Holding company
JSC RusHydro, including its subsidiaries and dependent companies (SDCs)
SDCs Subsidiaries and dependent companies – entities, in which another (main) economic entity due to its majority or greater participation in the charter capital or in accordance with a concluded agreement or in another way, has the opportunity to determine decisions adopted by said entities
JSC RAO UES of Russia
The Russian energy company (until July 1st, 2008). Full name – Open Joint Stock Company Unified Energy System of Russia. The Company previously united almost all of Russia’s energy sector under its umbrella. JSC RAO UES of Russia ceased to exist as of June 30th, 2008 due to comprehensive energy sector reform
OGKs Generating companies of the wholesale electricity market (WEM) – companies formed on the basis of power plants
TGKs Territorial generating companies – companies formed during the inter-regional integration of generating assets of JSC-energy (regional generating companies), except generating assets that are included in OGK(s)
IES Integrated Energy System (IES) – aggregated production and other electricity property assets, connected via a unified production process (including production in the form of the combined generation of electrical and thermal energy) and the supply of electrical energy under conditions of a centralized operating and dispatch management
HPP Hydro-electric power plant – the power plant as a unified production and technological complex, combining hydro-technical constructions and equipment that transforms mechanical energy from water into electric energy. In the text of the annual report, except when otherwise noted, tidal power stations and PS HPPs are included as HPPs
PS HPP Pump storage hydro-electric power plant – pump-storage power plant, which works by transforming electricity from other power plants into the potential energy of water; during reverse transformation, accumulated energy is contributed to the energy system primarily to cover deficits that may occur during peak load periods
HTC Hydro-technical constructions – dams, hydro-electric power plant constructions, spillways,drain and water-discharge constructions, tunnels, channels, pumping stations, navigation locks, boat lifts; buildings used to protect from floods and the destruction of water reservoir shores; dam constructions, protecting the liquid waste reservoirs of production and agricultural organizations; devices that protect against washing-away and other constructions designed to use water resources and to prevent any negative impact from water and liquid waste
RES Renewable energy sources – examples include: hydro, solar, wind, geo-thermal, hydraulic energy, energy from water currents, waves, tides, the temperature gradient of sea water, temperature differences between air masses and the ocean, heat from the Earth , animal bio-masses and vegetable and household waste
WPS Wind-power stations – equipment that is able to transform kinetic wind energy into electricity (wind-powered generators), located in one or more places. Large wind-power stations may consist of 100 or more wind-powered generators
FTS Federal Tariff Service
ATS Non-commercial partnership Administrator of the Trading System, which was created in 2001 in accordance with Government Decree N526 “On reform of the Russian power sector”. It focuses on organizing trade and financial payments in the wholesale energy market (WEM)
GLOSSARY
117
annual report / 2011
GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
WEM Wholesale electricity market (capacity) – sphere for turnover of electrical energy (capacity) within the framework of Russia’s integrated energy system within the country’s unified economic space with the participation of large electricity producers and consumers that have the status of wholesale market objects, confirmed in full accordance with the Russian Federal Law “On the electric power industry” (by the Russian Government). The criteria for including large electricity producers and consumers in the category of large producers and large consumers are also established by the Russian government
Installed capacity
Total nominal active capacity of generators at electric power plants which are part of the Group’s structure
NM WEM The new model of the wholesale electricity and capacity market foresees the transformation of the regulated sector of the wholesale market into a system of regulated contracts (RCs), concluded by wholesale market participants. Electricity and capacity will be sold under RCs. The volume of electricity not sold under RC s will be sold/purchased at free prices on the “day-ahead market” (at prices established as a result of the competitive choice of price applications and with free agreements, where prices are regulated by participants in the agreement(s)). At the same time, if the volume from the price application of purchases did not undergo competitive choice on the day-ahead market, the purchaser will have to buy the respective volumes for consumption on the balancing market
RC Regulated contracts are concluded by participants in the wholesale market for a term of 1 to 3 years. The prices in each of these agreements are tariffs for energy suppliers and capacity set by the Russian FTS. The primary condition of the RC is “take or pay”. The supplier has to provide the agreed upon amount of electricity (capacity) and (only for electricity) buy in the market at competitive prices on either the day-ahead market or via a free bilateral agreement. The purchaser has to pay for the agreed upon amount independent of its own planned consumption
Regulated sector of the wholesale electricity market
The portion of the wholesale electricity market, in which, wholesale trade of a portion of the volume of electricity and capacity are sold at tariffs approved by Russian federal executive organs on the regulation of natural monopolies in an order set by Russian Federal Law “On the State regulation of electricity and thermal energy tariffs in Russia”
Free trade sector
The sector, in which, the wholesale trade of a portion of produced electricity is concluded and executed in the form of buying and selling contracts and in the form of price bids from buyers and sellers at free (unregulated) prices
DAM Day-ahead market – a system that competitively determines the price for suppliers and purchasers on the wholesale electricity market a day ahead of real energy supply, defining hourly equilibrium key prices and supply volumes, conducted by the non-commercial partnership ATS. The day-ahead market defines full production and consumption volumes for electricity at each hour for the following day
BM Balancing market – the wholesale electricity market, where trade(s) of electricity volumes that deviate from plans are performed; this deviation is a result of differences between actual and planned supply/consumption volumes
MW Megawatt – a unit of measurement for electrical capacity
kWh Kilowatt-Hour – a unit of measurement for produced electricity
118
annual report / 2011
APPENDICES
Mandate Compliance
SECTION A: LEADERSHIP
A.1 The Role of the Board Every company should be headed by an effective board which is collectively responsible for the long-term success of the company
Complies
A.2 Division of Responsi-bilities
There should be a clear division of responsibilities at the head of the company between the running of the board and the executive responsibility for the running of the company’s business. No one individual should have unfettered powers of decision
Complies
A.3 The Chairman The chairman is responsible for leadership of the board and ensuring its effectiveness on all aspects of its role
Complies
A.4 Non-executive Direc-tors
As part of their role as members of a unitary board, non-executive directors should constructively challenge and help develop proposals on strategy
Complies
SECTION B: EFFECTIVENESS
B.1 The Composition of the Board
The board and its committees should have the appropriate balance of skills, experience, independence and knowledge of the company to enable them to discharge their respective duties and responsibilities effectively
Complies
B.2 Appointments to the Board
There should be a formal, rigorous and transparent proce-dure for the appointment of new directors to the board
Complies
B.3 Commitment All directors should be able to allocate sufficient time to the company to discharge their responsibilities effectively
Complies
B.4 Development All directors should receive induction on joining the board and should regularly update and refresh their skills and knowledge
Partially complies
B.5 Information and Sup-port
The board should be supplied in a timely manner with infor-mation in a form and of a quality appropriate to enable it to discharge its duties
Complies
B.6 Evaluation The board should undertake a formal and rigorous annual evaluation of its own performance and that of its committees and individual directors
Does not comply (The re-quirement is not feasible in the Russian Federation)
B.7 Re-election All directors should be submitted for re-election at regular intervals, subject to continued satisfactory performance
Complies
APPENDICES
REPORT ON COMPLIANCE WITH THE UK CODE ON CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
119
annual report / 2011
APPENDICES
Mandate Compliance
SECTION C: ACCOUNTABILITY
C.1 Financial And Busi-ness Reporting
The board should present a balanced and understandable as-sessment of the company’s position and prospects
Complies
C.2 Risk Management and Internal Control
The board is responsible for determining the nature and ex-tent of the significant risks it is willing to take in achieving its strategic objectives. The board should maintain sound risk management and internal control systems
Complies
C.3 Audit Committee and Auditors
The board should establish formal and transparent arrange-ments for considering how they should apply the corporate reporting and risk management and internal control princi-ples and for maintaining an appropriate relationship with the company’s auditor
Complies
SECTION D: REMUNERATION
D.1 The Level and Com-ponents of Remunera-tion
Levels of remuneration should be sufficient to attract, retain and motivate directors of the quality required to run the com-pany successfully, but a company should avoid paying more than is necessary for this purpose. A significant proportion of executive directors’ remuneration should be structured so as to link rewards to corporate and individual performance
Complies
D.2 Procedure There should be a formal and transparent procedure for de-veloping policy on executive remuneration and for fixing the remuneration packages of individual directors. No director should be involved in deciding his or her own remuneration
Complies
SECTION E: RELATIONS WITH SHAREHOLDERS
E.1 Dialogue with Share-holders
There should be a dialogue with shareholders based on the mutual understanding of objectives. The board as a whole has responsibility for ensuring that a satisfactory dialogue with shareholders takes place
Complies
E.2 Constructive Use of the AGM
The board should use the AGM to communicate with inves-tors and to encourage their participation
Complies
120
annual report / 2011
APPENDICES
LIST OF RUSHYDRO’S INTERNAL DOCUMENTS JSC RusHydro’s corporate governance principles and procedures are set forth in the Company’s Articles of Association and other internal regulatory documents:• The Articles of Association approved by the General Meeting of Shareholders of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 7 from July
4th, 2011) registered with District Inspectorate No. 23 of the Federal Tax Service in the Krasnoyarsk Region on July 13th, 2011; State registration number GRN 2112468448618;
• JSC RusHydro’s Code of Corporate Governance approved by the Board of Directors of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 94 from April 2nd, 2010);
• Corporate Code of Ethics approved by the Board of Directors of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 85 from October 05, 2010);• Regulations on the Procedure for Preparing and Holding the General Meeting of Shareholders approved by a resolution of
the General Meeting of Shareholders of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 5 from June 30th, 2010); • Regulations on Procedures for Convening and Holding Meetings of the Board of Directors approved by a resolution of the
General Meeting of Shareholders of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 7 from July 4th, 2011);• Regulations on the Audit Commission of the Board of Directors of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 116, December 30th, 2010); • Regulations on the HR and Remuneration Committee of the Board of Directors approved by a resolution of the Board of
Directors of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 59 from July 18th, 2008);• Regulations on the Strategy Committee of the Board of Directors approved by a resolution of the Board of Directors of
JSC HydroOGK (Minutes No. 5 from April 25th, 2005);• Regulations on the Investment Committee of the Board of Directors approved by a resolution of the Board of Directors
of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 59 from July 18th, 2008);• Regulations on the Reliability, Energy Efficiency and Innovation Committee of the Board of Directors approved by a
resolution of the Board of Directors of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 92 from February 11th, 2010);• Regulations of the Management Board approved by a resolution of the Annual General Meeting of Shareholders of JSC
RusHydro (Minutes No. 1 from June 26th, 2008);• Regulations on the Audit Commission approved by the decision of the Management Board of RAO UES of Russia (acting
as a general meeting of members) (extract from the Protocol No. 1187pr/3 dated 6 April 2005);• Regulations on the Internal Audit and Risk Management Department approved by a resolution of the Board of Directors
of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 116 from December 30th, 2010);• Regulations on the Internal Audit and Risk Management Department approved by a resolution of the Board of Directors
of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 37 from August 15th, 2008);• Regulations on Remuneration and Compensation to Members of the Board of Directors approved by a resolution of the
Board of Directors of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 5 from June 30th, 2010);• Regulations on Remuneration and Compensation to Members of the Audit Commission approved by a resolution of the
General Meeting of Shareholders of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 1 from June 26th, 2008);• Regulations on Dividend Policy approved by a resolution of the Board of Directors of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 85 from
October 5th, 2009);• Regulations on the Information Policy of JSC RusHydro approved by a resolution of the Board of Directors of JSC
RusHydro (Minutes No. 129 from August 1st, 2011);• Regulations on Insider Information for JSC RusHydro approved by a resolution of the Board of Directors of JSC RusHydro
(Minutes No. 129 from August 1st, 2011); and• Procedure for Interaction between JSC RusHydro and Entities with RusHydro Participation approved by a resolution of the
Board of Directors of JSC RusHydro (Minutes No. 106 from September 1st, 2010).
Please visit the Company’s web site at http://www.rushydro.ru/investors/disclosure/regulations to review the full text of the above-mentioned documents.